Thesis ID: CBB001560828

The Politics of Metaphor in Seventeenth-Century England (2007)

unapi

Attie, Katherine Bootle (Author)


University of Virginia
Maus, Katharine E.


Publication Date: 2007
Edition Details: Advisor: Maus, Katharine E.
Physical Details: 301 pp.
Language: English

This dissertation examines figurative language as a vehicle of cultural and political change. Covering a range of seventeenth-century writers who turn tritely familiar metaphors into powerful tools of persuasion, I demonstrate that metaphor proves indispensable to the construction of revolutionary discourses throughout the century. Each chapter is organized around a central trope or image pattern that helped an innovative writer to envisage a new philosophy, reformist movement, or political transformation: for Francis Bacon, crowning nature with metaphors of sovereignty was the way to make scientific reform appeal to King James I; for Puritan writers at mid-century, militarizing the standard image of England as garden was a means of intertwining the causes of civil war with those of agrarian improvement and spiritual self-defense; for Thomas Hobbes, the radical revision of the analogy of the body politic was the key to establishing an immortal commonwealth; for Bacon, William Harvey, Thomas Sprat, and other advocates of natural philosophy, figuring knowledge as a commodity was a way to emphasize the practical value of experimental science. In all these cases, I argue, conventional metaphors are politically acting and acted upon: they are stabilizing forces, tempering the introduction of new ideas and ordering the confusion of cultural change within a familiar rhetorical frame, even while the metaphors themselves are destabilized, subtly modified or dramatically transformed according to the writer's historical circumstances and rhetorical needs. This study moves beyond the conception of figurative language as "mere" literary or rhetorical embellishment and furthers the recognition of metaphor's substantive place in seventeenth-century thought, even in the emergence of modern science itself. My argument revises the established opinion that the empirical revolution, emphasizing "things" over words, killed the richly metaphoric language of correspondence that characterized the medieval and early modern worldview and replaced it with a dry, figureless prose of definition and differentiation. Instead, this work hopes to contribute to a much-needed reappraisal of metaphor's importance in shaping the philosophic discourses of Bacon, Harrington, Hobbes, Sprat, and other seventeenth-century voices of change.

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Description Includes discussion of Hobbes, Bacon, Sprat, and Harvey. Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 68/09 (2008). Pub. no. AAT 3284741.


Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Baldassarri, Fabrizio
Holt, Paddy
Liou, Jennifer Hwa Yu
Tombs, George
Strom, Richard G.
Skouen, Tina
Journals
Configurations: A Journal of Literature, Science, and Technology
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Rhetorica: A Journal of the History of Rhetoric
Renaissance Studies
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Modern Philology
Publishers
University of California, Irvine
McGill University (Canada)
Walter de Gruyter
Stanford University Press
Ashgate
Concepts
Rhetoric in scientific discourse
Metaphors; analogies
Linguistic or semantic analysis
Natural philosophy
Medicine
Societies; institutions; academies
People
Harvey, William
Sprat, Thomas
Bacon, Francis, 1st Baron Verulam
Hobbes, Thomas
Shakespeare, William
Descartes, René
Time Periods
17th century
18th century
Early modern
16th century
Medieval
Ancient
Places
England
China
British Isles
Institutions
Royal Society of London
Royal College of Physicians of London
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