Article ID: CBB530159639

“O Multiplied Misery!”: The Disordered Medical Narrative of John Donne's Devotions (2016)

unapi

John Donne composed his Devotions upon Emergent Occasions (1624) to share a revelatory experience of illness with readers. Yet, in the book's final chapter, Donne himself indicates that bodily pain is nearly incommunicable. This raises a question: How can Donne hope to share his illness with readers when he believes its physical symptoms resist communication? This essay argues that Donne bypasses this impasse by formally recreating one of his illness's contemplative symptoms: the vexed temporal disorder caused by interpreting one's world from within a sick body. Because this symptom arises from Donne's inability to order the events of his illness, he is able to recreate it within readers by likewise disordering the Devotions' narrative. By sharing this contemplative “torment” with readers, the Devotions democratizes Donne's difficult path toward spiritual revelation. In doing so, it demonstrates that narrative form can bridge the communication gap between the suffering writer and his readers.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB530159639/

Similar Citations

Article Marion Turner; (2016)
Illness Narratives in the Later Middle Ages: Arderne, Chaucer, and Hoccleve (/isis/citation/CBB748337184/)

Article Boyle, Frank; (1998)
Old Poetry and New Science: Swift, Cowley, and Modernity (/isis/citation/CBB000952370/)

Chapter Emerson, Jocelyn; (2005)
Donne and the Noble Art (/isis/citation/CBB000771996/)

Article Margaret Healy; (2016)
Medicine, Metaphor, and 'Crisis' in the Early Modern Social Body (/isis/citation/CBB266241183/)

Book Daniela De Liso; Valeria Merola; (2020)
La medicina dell’anima: prosa e poesia per il racconto della malattia (/isis/citation/CBB600494617/)

Book Steger, Florian; Jankrift, Kay Peter; (2004)
Gesundheit, Krankheit: Kulturtransfer medizinischen Wissens von der Spätantike bis in die Frühe Neuzeit (/isis/citation/CBB000640981/)

Book Broyard, Anatole; Sacks, Oliver; Broyard, Alexandra; Martínez-Lage, Miguel (trans.); (2013)
Ebrio de enfermedad: y otros escritos de la vida y de la muerte (/isis/citation/CBB001450498/)

Chapter Kaldellis, Anthony; (2007)
The Literature of Plague and the Anxieties of Piety in Sixth-Century Byzantium (/isis/citation/CBB001023377/)

Book Schwartz, Louis; (2009)
Milton and Maternal Mortality (/isis/citation/CBB001230204/)

Chapter Spates, William; (2010)
Shakespeare and the Irony of Early Modern Disease Metaphor and Metonymy (/isis/citation/CBB001253087/)

Book Wübben, Yvonne; Zelle, Carsten; (2013)
Krankheit schreiben: Aufzeichnungsverfahren in Medizin und Literatur (/isis/citation/CBB001451895/)

Book Shuttleton, David E.; (2007)
Smallpox and the Literary Imagination 1660--1820 (/isis/citation/CBB000930590/)

Book Healy, Margaret; (2002)
Fictions of Disease in Early Modern England: Bodies, Plagues, and Politics (/isis/citation/CBB000358493/)

Thesis Phillips, Patrick; (2006)
“Fleshes Rage”: Ben Jonson and the Plague (/isis/citation/CBB001561648/)

Authors & Contributors
Healy, Margaret
Merola, Valeria
De Liso, Daniela
Turner, Marion
Sacks, Oliver
Martínez-Lage, Miguel
Journals
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Vesalius
1650--1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Ediciones La Uña Rota
Wallstein Verlag
University of Pennsylvania Press
Palgrave
Loffredo
Concepts
Medicine and literature
Disease and diseases
Poetry and poetics
Medicine
Medicine and religion
Plague
People
Donne, John
Shakespeare, William
Milton, John
Vesalius, Andreas
Swift, Jonathan
Montagu, Mary Wortley, Lady
Time Periods
17th century
Early modern
Medieval
16th century
Renaissance
Modern
Places
England
Europe
Great Britain
Byzantium
United States
Spain
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment