Publicação

Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry

Ver documento

Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:The habit of melancholy in the early modern period engendered medical inquiry, selfexamination, and artistic reverberations. The theory of the humours, combined with Aristotle’s dovetailing of melancholy and genius, exerted enormous influence on attitudes towards melancholy. Melancholy became, then, a desirable attribute, and the figure of the atrabilious man something to emulate. Women, however, because of their disorderly bodies and unruly emotions, were largely excluded from the tradition of melancholy. Their presumed irrationality precluded them from partaking in its artistic associations. Therefore, the atrabilious woman was not a woman of great intellectual capabilities, but simply a sick woman suffering from pathological melancholia. So far, it is the tradition of melancholy in poetry written by men that has been the subject of scholarly analysis and scrutiny, and only in recent years has there been a greater effort to include women poets in this major tradition. This dissertation examines a selection of poems by English women writing in the early modern period, such as Aemilia Lanyer, Margaret Cavendish, Anne Lock, Mary Sidney, and Katherine Philips, and attempts to determine how melancholy is experienced, performed, and deployed in their work, and also to what extent conceptions of melancholy are gendered. The question of women’s marginalised place in society and usual relegation to the domestic sphere is of central importance in exploring to what degree the politicisation of melancholy as subversive device figures in their poetry. The absence of agency plays an important part in the ways early modern English women poets use melancholy to challenge preconceived notions of womanhood and manipulate it in order to self-fashion representation.
Autores principais:Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito
Assunto:Melancholy Early modern England Women Poets Agency Religion Mourning Melancolia Renascimento inglês Poetas femininas Iniciativa Religião Luto
Ano:2017
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:dissertação de mestrado
Tipo de acesso:acesso restrito
Instituição associada:Universidade do Minho
Idioma:inglês
Origem:RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
_version_ 1864251646382440448
author Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito
author_facet Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito
author_role author
contributor_name_str_mv Guimarães, Paula Alexandra
Universidade do Minho
country_str PT
creators_json_str [{\"Person.name\":\"Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito\"}]
datacite.contributors.contributor.contributorName.fl_str_mv Guimarães, Paula Alexandra
Universidade do Minho
datacite.creators.creator.creatorName.fl_str_mv Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito
datacite.date.Accepted.fl_str_mv 2017-03-07T00:00:00Z
datacite.rights.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
datacite.subjects.subject.fl_str_mv Melancholy
Early modern England
Women Poets
Agency
Religion
Mourning
Melancolia
Renascimento inglês
Poetas femininas
Iniciativa
Religião
Luto
datacite.titles.title.fl_str_mv Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
Melancolia e identidade poética na poesia feminina inglesa do renascimento
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Guimarães, Paula Alexandra
Universidade do Minho
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito
dc.date.Accepted.fl_str_mv 2017-03-07T00:00:00Z
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv https://hdl.handle.net/1822/45904
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv eng
dc.rights.none.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Melancholy
Early modern England
Women Poets
Agency
Religion
Mourning
Melancolia
Renascimento inglês
Poetas femininas
Iniciativa
Religião
Luto
dc.title.fl_str_mv Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
Melancolia e identidade poética na poesia feminina inglesa do renascimento
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdcc
description The habit of melancholy in the early modern period engendered medical inquiry, selfexamination, and artistic reverberations. The theory of the humours, combined with Aristotle’s dovetailing of melancholy and genius, exerted enormous influence on attitudes towards melancholy. Melancholy became, then, a desirable attribute, and the figure of the atrabilious man something to emulate. Women, however, because of their disorderly bodies and unruly emotions, were largely excluded from the tradition of melancholy. Their presumed irrationality precluded them from partaking in its artistic associations. Therefore, the atrabilious woman was not a woman of great intellectual capabilities, but simply a sick woman suffering from pathological melancholia. So far, it is the tradition of melancholy in poetry written by men that has been the subject of scholarly analysis and scrutiny, and only in recent years has there been a greater effort to include women poets in this major tradition. This dissertation examines a selection of poems by English women writing in the early modern period, such as Aemilia Lanyer, Margaret Cavendish, Anne Lock, Mary Sidney, and Katherine Philips, and attempts to determine how melancholy is experienced, performed, and deployed in their work, and also to what extent conceptions of melancholy are gendered. The question of women’s marginalised place in society and usual relegation to the domestic sphere is of central importance in exploring to what degree the politicisation of melancholy as subversive device figures in their poetry. The absence of agency plays an important part in the ways early modern English women poets use melancholy to challenge preconceived notions of womanhood and manipulate it in order to self-fashion representation.
dirty 0
eu_rights_str_mv restrictedAccess
format masterThesis
fulltext.url.fl_str_mv https://prod-dspace.uminho.pt/bitstreams/e585deab-874e-44fc-b273-eb1d4c294bc2/download
id rum_64d1e8359285d76e06767de702eb7bd8
identifier.url.fl_str_mv https://hdl.handle.net/1822/45904
instacron_str repositorium
institution Universidade do Minho
instname_str Universidade do Minho
language eng
network_acronym_str rum
network_name_str RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
oai_identifier_str oai:repositorium.uminho.pt:1822/45904
organization_str_mv urn:organizationAcronym:repositorium
person_str_mv Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito
publishDate 2017
reponame_str RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
repository_id_str urn:repositoryAcronym:rum
service_str_mv urn:repositoryAcronym:rum
spelling engporThe habit of melancholy in the early modern period engendered medical inquiry, selfexamination, and artistic reverberations. The theory of the humours, combined with Aristotle’s dovetailing of melancholy and genius, exerted enormous influence on attitudes towards melancholy. Melancholy became, then, a desirable attribute, and the figure of the atrabilious man something to emulate. Women, however, because of their disorderly bodies and unruly emotions, were largely excluded from the tradition of melancholy. Their presumed irrationality precluded them from partaking in its artistic associations. Therefore, the atrabilious woman was not a woman of great intellectual capabilities, but simply a sick woman suffering from pathological melancholia. So far, it is the tradition of melancholy in poetry written by men that has been the subject of scholarly analysis and scrutiny, and only in recent years has there been a greater effort to include women poets in this major tradition. This dissertation examines a selection of poems by English women writing in the early modern period, such as Aemilia Lanyer, Margaret Cavendish, Anne Lock, Mary Sidney, and Katherine Philips, and attempts to determine how melancholy is experienced, performed, and deployed in their work, and also to what extent conceptions of melancholy are gendered. The question of women’s marginalised place in society and usual relegation to the domestic sphere is of central importance in exploring to what degree the politicisation of melancholy as subversive device figures in their poetry. The absence of agency plays an important part in the ways early modern English women poets use melancholy to challenge preconceived notions of womanhood and manipulate it in order to self-fashion representation.application/pdfporMelancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetryAlternativeTitleporMelancolia e identidade poética na poesia feminina inglesa do renascimentoMonteiro, Ana Catarina de BritoGuimarães, Paula AlexandraHostingInstitutionOrganizationalUniversidade do Minhoe-mailmailto:repositorium@usdb.uminho.ptrepositorium@usdb.uminho.ptURNurn:tid:2016901012017-03-072017-01-312017-03-07T00:00:00ZHandlehttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/45904http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ecrestricted accessMelancholyEarly modern EnglandWomen PoetsAgencyReligionMourningMelancoliaRenascimento inglêsPoetas femininasIniciativaReligiãoLuto584646 bytesliteraturehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccmaster thesishttp://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ecapplication/pdffulltexthttps://prod-dspace.uminho.pt/bitstreams/e585deab-874e-44fc-b273-eb1d4c294bc2/download
spellingShingle Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
Monteiro, Ana Catarina de Brito
Melancholy
Early modern England
Women Poets
Agency
Religion
Mourning
Melancolia
Renascimento inglês
Poetas femininas
Iniciativa
Religião
Luto
subject.fl_str_mv Melancholy
Early modern England
Women Poets
Agency
Religion
Mourning
Melancolia
Renascimento inglês
Poetas femininas
Iniciativa
Religião
Luto
title Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
title_full Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
title_fullStr Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
title_full_unstemmed Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
title_short Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
title_sort Melancholy and the poetic self in early modern women’s poetry
topic Melancholy
Early modern England
Women Poets
Agency
Religion
Mourning
Melancolia
Renascimento inglês
Poetas femininas
Iniciativa
Religião
Luto
topic_facet Melancholy
Early modern England
Women Poets
Agency
Religion
Mourning
Melancolia
Renascimento inglês
Poetas femininas
Iniciativa
Religião
Luto
url https://hdl.handle.net/1822/45904
visible 1