- Department: English and Related Literature
- Credit value: 20 credits
- Credit level: M
- Academic year of delivery: 2022-23
- See module specification for other years: 2024-25
The mid-seventeenth century witnessed a revolution both in science and politics, and the idea of ‘nature’ was right at the centre of both. In this module, we will be looking at nature both as a philosophical idea, as a universal principle, as a set of laws, or as God’s handmaiden. We will be reading a broad range of genres, as well as studying visual material, such as emblems, paintings, and garden designs. We will be examining how ideas about nature are often inextricably bound up with questions about political power and control, gender relations, yet are at the same time expressive of a yearning for a lost Edenic state of innocence. At the same time, we will be discovering a range of avatars of modern-day discussions in the early modern debates on vegetarianism, animal souls, and animal rights.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
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A | Autumn Term 2022-23 |
The aims of this module is to gain a historicized understanding of the meaning of ‘nature’ as a key term in philosophical, theological and scientific discourses in the seventeenth century, as well as being able to chart the most significant changes taking places during that century. The module will equip you with a good grasp of Christian accounts of creation, as well as of some of the competing, heterodox cosmologies available during this time, and will enable you to trace their complex interactions, and their impact on the literary production of the period. You will learn to recognise and analyse the genres of writing about nature, including natural history, pastoral, the country house poem, chorography and travel narrative. You will study some of the classics of Green Renaissance historiography, as well as a selection of more recent scholarship, helping you to gain an overview of these still-evolving debates
On successful completion of the module, you should be able to:
1. Demonstrate an advanced understanding of and engagement with the philosophical, theological and scientific understandings of nature in the early modern period.
2. Demonstrate an advanced understanding of the different discourses and genres in which nature is discussed, from pastoral poetry to emblematics, mythology and natural history, and to be able to contextualize them.
3. To have understood the different critical approaches current in the field of green Renaissance studies, including cultural materialist, feminist, and post-humanist, and to be able to weigh their respective advantages and disadvantages.
4. Produce independent arguments and ideas which demonstrate an advanced proficiency in critical thinking, research, and writing skills.
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Essay/coursework | 100 |
None
Task | % of module mark |
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Essay/coursework | 100 |
Plato, Timaeus
Lucretius, De Rerum Natura
Arthur Golding, Ovid’s Metamorphoses
Joshua Sylvester, Du Bartas his Divine Works and Days
Edmund Spenser, The Mutabilitie Cantos
John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book V and VIII
Thomas Browne, The Garden of Cyrus
Margaret Cavendish, ‘The Hunting of the Hare’ and other poems
Plutarch, On the Eating of Meat; Isis and Osiris
Ben Johnson, ‘To Penshurst’
Andrew Marvell, ‘Upon Appleton House’; the ‘mower poems’
Aemilia Lanyer, ‘The Description of Cookham’
John Evelyn, Sylva and Diary
Maria Sybilla Merian, Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium
William Cavendish, A New Method and Extraordinary Invention to Dress Horses and Work them according to Nature.
Robert Boyle, Considerations touching the Usefulness of Experimental Natural Philosophy; A Free Enquiry into the Vulgarly Received Notion of Nature