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Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne Daniela Havenstein (Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Wolfson College, Oxford)

Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne By Daniela Havenstein (Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Wolfson College, Oxford)

Summary

This study offers a reconsideration both of the style of Religio Medici and of its early reception history, especially as witnessed by a group of late-17th and early 18th-century texts that can loosely be described as imitations.

Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne Summary

Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne: Religio Medici and its Imitations by Daniela Havenstein (Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Wolfson College, Oxford)

Criticism on Sir Thomas Browne is at present in a state of limbo. Little or no attention is paid to his once famous style, while his political attitudes have increasingly jarred with current trends in literary criticism. Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne offers a reconsideration both of Religio Medici's style and of its early reception history, especially as witnessed by a group of late-seventeenth and early eighteenth-century texts that can loosely be described as 'imitations'. The first part of the book focuses on this hitherto neglected aspect of the reception of Religio Medici, establishing and then analysing examples of imitation, plagiarism, and animadversion, with particular reference to three books which are outstanding in this respect: Sir George Mackenzie's Religio Stoici(1663), John Dunton and Benjamin Bridgwater's Religio Bibliopolae (1691), and Richard Burridge's Religio Libertini (1712). The many and complex responses to Browne's Religio Medici bear witness to the book's centrality in the period: examination of these responses permits a more differentiated assessment of the work itself, and a deeper understanding of seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century mentalities. The second part of the book attempts to create a new context for the study of seventeenth-century prose by re-examining Morris W. Croll's analysis of Browne's idiom in Religio Medici employing quantitative techniques, the use of which is itself subjected to analysis. Particular attention is paid to word-classes, word-patterns, and lexis. The results of this quantitative investigation are then used as the parameters for comparing the work's three major 'imitations'. To embed this study into a broader seventeenth-century framework, a group of control writers is also examined: John Donne, Jeremy Taylor, and Richard Baker. Freeing Browne from the corset of previous stylistic criticism, will, it is hoped, pave the way for a reconsideration of his style and that of seventeenth-century prose more generally.

Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne Reviews

an absorbing, first-rate piece of contextualization * The Review of English Studies, Vol.52, No.207 *
genuinely revelatory * The Review of English Studies, Vol.52, No.207 *

Table of Contents

Preface ; Religio writing in the seventeenth and early eighteenth century ; Religio Medici and the Restoration virtuoso ; Religio Medici and Grubstreet ; Religio Medici and Newgate ; The resurrection of Morris W. Croll ; Anatomizing Croll and Religio Medici ; Anatomizing Religio Medici's imitations ; Searching for the limbs of Osiris ; 'Suicide' and other Words in Religio Medici and its imitations ; Conclusions ; Appendix: Table of Word-Classes ; Bibliography ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780198186267
9780198186267
0198186266
Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne: Religio Medici and its Imitations by Daniela Havenstein (Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Junior Reseach Fellow in English Literature, Wolfson College, Oxford)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
1999-11-25
244
N/A
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