Alchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writing

<p>This thesis explores how four female poets—Aemilia Lanyer (1569-1645), Hester Pulter (1607-1678), Katherine Philips (1632-1664), and Margaret Cavendish (1623-1673)—conceptualise poetry as an alchemy of the mind that nonetheless has real, practical implications for themselves and for their r...

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Main Author: Allan, KF
Other Authors: Hutson, L
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
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author Allan, KF
author2 Hutson, L
author_facet Hutson, L
Allan, KF
author_sort Allan, KF
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis explores how four female poets—Aemilia Lanyer (1569-1645), Hester Pulter (1607-1678), Katherine Philips (1632-1664), and Margaret Cavendish (1623-1673)—conceptualise poetry as an alchemy of the mind that nonetheless has real, practical implications for themselves and for their readers. The ‘alchemical poetics’ of these women writers thus exhibit a lively interest in, and radical transformation of, alchemical thought that grapples variously with the saving of souls, healing of the body, and transmutation of matter. More crucially, I contend that this grouping of women writers is actively participating in the evolution of alchemical thought through poetry. </p> <p>Over the course of this thesis, I present the ‘alchemical poetics’ of Lanyer, Pulter, Philips, and Cavendish as creatively engaging with, and rethinking, a wide range of alchemical authors and ideas in ways that have hitherto been underappreciated by literary critics as well as historians of science. In this regard, my thesis integrates recent shifts in the history of science and the role of women, but also fruitfully extends them into new and exciting territory. The promotion of the importance of women in histories of alchemy, now widely recognised as important to a range of scientific activities in the early modern period, has occurred alongside renewed interest in female writers of the early modern period; yet only a handful of critics have actually seen how these fields are mutually informative—a missed opportunity that this thesis aims to redress. </p> <p>In four chapters, each dealing with a single author, I reveal hitherto uncovered connections between alchemical communities and draw on newly identified alchemical source material to address the deeply-rooted interconnections between alchemical practice and its poetic representation. I interrogate what this alchemical material generates in a specifically poetic context, and map how this distinctly poetic engagement shifts over the seventeenth century. The content of this thesis as well as chronological arrangement therefore seeks to reveal new perspectives not only on how these female poets engaged with the substance of early modern alchemical thought, theology, politics, and literary culture, but also how serious their contemporaries also understood that engagement to be. </p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:55a62562-ce21-4b97-92b3-2c3958414c342024-01-09T16:01:47ZAlchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writingThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:55a62562-ce21-4b97-92b3-2c3958414c34English poetry--Early modern, 1500-1700--History and criticismPoets, English--Early modern, 1500-1700Libraries--Special collections--AlchemyEnglish language--Early modern, 1500-1700--RhetoricAlchemy--Religious aspectsEnglish literature--Early modern, 1500-1700EnglishHyrax Deposit2023Allan, KFHutson, LSugimura, NK<p>This thesis explores how four female poets—Aemilia Lanyer (1569-1645), Hester Pulter (1607-1678), Katherine Philips (1632-1664), and Margaret Cavendish (1623-1673)—conceptualise poetry as an alchemy of the mind that nonetheless has real, practical implications for themselves and for their readers. The ‘alchemical poetics’ of these women writers thus exhibit a lively interest in, and radical transformation of, alchemical thought that grapples variously with the saving of souls, healing of the body, and transmutation of matter. More crucially, I contend that this grouping of women writers is actively participating in the evolution of alchemical thought through poetry. </p> <p>Over the course of this thesis, I present the ‘alchemical poetics’ of Lanyer, Pulter, Philips, and Cavendish as creatively engaging with, and rethinking, a wide range of alchemical authors and ideas in ways that have hitherto been underappreciated by literary critics as well as historians of science. In this regard, my thesis integrates recent shifts in the history of science and the role of women, but also fruitfully extends them into new and exciting territory. The promotion of the importance of women in histories of alchemy, now widely recognised as important to a range of scientific activities in the early modern period, has occurred alongside renewed interest in female writers of the early modern period; yet only a handful of critics have actually seen how these fields are mutually informative—a missed opportunity that this thesis aims to redress. </p> <p>In four chapters, each dealing with a single author, I reveal hitherto uncovered connections between alchemical communities and draw on newly identified alchemical source material to address the deeply-rooted interconnections between alchemical practice and its poetic representation. I interrogate what this alchemical material generates in a specifically poetic context, and map how this distinctly poetic engagement shifts over the seventeenth century. The content of this thesis as well as chronological arrangement therefore seeks to reveal new perspectives not only on how these female poets engaged with the substance of early modern alchemical thought, theology, politics, and literary culture, but also how serious their contemporaries also understood that engagement to be. </p>
spellingShingle English poetry--Early modern, 1500-1700--History and criticism
Poets, English--Early modern, 1500-1700
Libraries--Special collections--Alchemy
English language--Early modern, 1500-1700--Rhetoric
Alchemy--Religious aspects
English literature--Early modern, 1500-1700
Allan, KF
Alchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writing
title Alchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writing
title_full Alchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writing
title_fullStr Alchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writing
title_full_unstemmed Alchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writing
title_short Alchemical poetics in seventeenth-century women's writing
title_sort alchemical poetics in seventeenth century women s writing
topic English poetry--Early modern, 1500-1700--History and criticism
Poets, English--Early modern, 1500-1700
Libraries--Special collections--Alchemy
English language--Early modern, 1500-1700--Rhetoric
Alchemy--Religious aspects
English literature--Early modern, 1500-1700
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