Guevara, Perry (Author)
This essay turns to minimal cognition, a theoretical extension of embodied cognition, to argue for plant sentience in John Milton's Paradise Lost. Milton imagines plants as minimally cognitive beings within an affective ecosystem, where they readily enter into the epic poem's complex circuits of desire with appetites of their own. Specifically, the essay claims that botanical cognition arises at the convergence of two seventeenth-century philosophical systems: the first, Milton's materialist monism, and the second, Paracelsian medicine, which avers a plant's therapeutic effect on a human body part sharing morphological resemblance. The essay concludes that Milton's eroticization of similitude enables a new sensus communis where cognition is subtler and where nonhuman desire engenders alternate forms of ecologic communality.
...More
Book
Margaret Willes;
(2015)
A Shakespearean Botanical
(/isis/citation/CBB647549819/)
Book
Page, Judith W;
Smith, Elise Lawton;
(2011)
Women, Literature, and the Domesticated Landscape: England's Disciples of Flora, 1780--1870
(/isis/citation/CBB001214713/)
Article
Samson, Alexander;
(2011)
Outdoor Pursuits: Spanish Gardens, the Huerto and Lope de Vega's Novelas a Marcia Leonarda
(/isis/citation/CBB001230835/)
Book
Munroe, Jennifer;
(2008)
Gender and the Garden in Early Modern English Literature
(/isis/citation/CBB001023605/)
Book
Gerit Quealy;
Sumie Hasegawa Collins;
Helen Mirren;
(2017)
Botanical Shakespeare: An Illustrated Compendium of All the Flowers, Fruits, Herbs, Trees, Seeds, and Grasses Cited by the World's Greatest Playwright
(/isis/citation/CBB274758292/)
Article
Samson, Alexander;
(2011)
Introduction Locus amoenus: Gardens and Horticulture in the Renaissance
(/isis/citation/CBB001230830/)
Book
Riddle, John M.;
(2010)
Goddesses, Elixirs, and Witches: Plants and Sexuality throughout Human History
(/isis/citation/CBB001033522/)
Article
Elliott, Brent;
(2011)
The World of the Renaissance Herbal
(/isis/citation/CBB001230831/)
Article
Olga Elina;
(2018)
A Passion for Plants: Collections and Power Games in Botany in the Russian Empire from the 18th to the Early 19th Century
(/isis/citation/CBB427183623/)
Article
Tigner, Amy L.;
(2012)
The Tradescants' Culinary Treasures
(/isis/citation/CBB001320001/)
Thesis
McHenry, James P.;
(1994)
“Still to tend plant, herb and flour”: Horticulture and botany in the poetry of John Milton
(/isis/citation/CBB001564630/)
Book
Major, Judith K.;
(2013)
Mariana Griswold Van Rensselaer: A Landscape Critic in the Gilded Age
(/isis/citation/CBB001422319/)
Book
Daniele Angelotti;
(2022)
L'orto del Granduca. Botanica e agronomia nella Toscana di Cosimo III de’ Medici
(/isis/citation/CBB730926695/)
Article
Price, Cheryl Blake;
(2013)
Vegetable Monsters: Man-Eating Trees in fin-de-siècle Fiction
(/isis/citation/CBB001201799/)
Thesis
Doss, Helen Michelle;
(2004)
Subjectivity, Opposition, and Subversion: Divine Illumination, Right Reason,and the Revision of the Experimental Scientific Method in John Milton's“Paradise Regained”
(/isis/citation/CBB001562115/)
Thesis
Dye, Amy;
(2005)
Writing Creation in England, 1580--1680
(/isis/citation/CBB001560880/)
Book
McColley, Diane Kelsey;
(2007)
Poetry and Ecology in the Age of Milton and Marvell
(/isis/citation/CBB000774601/)
Book
Duran, Angelica;
(2007)
The Age of Milton and the Scientific Revolution
(/isis/citation/CBB000773914/)
Thesis
Silverman, William John, Jr.;
(2011)
Seeing While Blind: Disability, Theories of Vision, and Milton's Poetry
(/isis/citation/CBB001567262/)
Article
Christopher Harrington;
(2022)
“Cut it, woman”: Masculinity, Nectar, and the Orgasm in Charlotte Brontë's Shirley (1849)
(/isis/citation/CBB352493959/)
Be the first to comment!