Cold Tyranny and the Demonic North of Early Modern England

Anne Cotterill

Cold Tyranny and the Demonic North of Early Modern England

The seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries were among the worst years of the Little Ice Age. This volume attends to English texts from this period to trace associations between wintry physical landscapes and an icy inner landscape of human cruelty and tyranny whose rigors promote the ultimate chill of rigor mortis. Sailors seeking a polar route to the East brought terrifying reports of northern icescapes, long popularly linked with the devil. Simultaneously, concerns about increasingly cold winters at home in Britain overlapped with increased scrutiny of kingship and the church and fear of tyranny from both. Such fears were reflected in ongoing struggles between king and Parliament during the period, leading to revolution and war. The binding power of ice and the power of northern winters to deface, kill, and bury life suggested the Fall’s human parallel to winter: cold-hearted humans as tyrannical winters who deal in death.
Noot: om dit e-boek te openen heeft u Adobe Digital Editions nodig
Auteur

Anne Cotterill

Anne Cotterill is Associate Professor Emerita at Missouri University of Science and Technology. She has published Digressive Voices in Early Modern English Literature (Oxford, 2004) and essays on the work of John Dryden, Andrew Marvell, and Elizabeth Isham.
Titel
Cold Tyranny and the Demonic North of Early Modern England
Auteur
Prijs
€ 140,99
ISBN
9789048544868
Uitvoering
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Aantal pagina's
336
Publicatiedatum
Afmetingen
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Serie
Environmental Humanities in Pre-modern Cultures
Categorieën
Cultural Studies
Early Modern Studies
Environmental Humanities
Literary Theory, Criticism, and History
Discipline
History, Art History, and Archaeology
Voorbeeld
Download introductie en inhoudsopgave
Ook beschikbaar als
Hardback - € 141,00