193 research outputs found

    Writing Illness and Identity in Seventeenth-century Britain

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    This thesis begins from the observation that seventeenth-century life-writing appears to have little recourse to the age's revolutionary medical developments when describing personal illness. It therefore seeks to explore the available textual frameworks for writing autobiographical accounts of illness, and the rhetorical strategies that writers of such texts used for adapting their illnesses to those frameworks. My research is contextualised within discussions of early modern selfhood. Like a number of recent scholars, I reject the Burkhardtian assumption of a vibrant Renaissance self, born, fully formed, sometime during the Tudor age. I present examples of illnesses described both as self-obliterating and self-invigorating, but the moments of self-invigoration, I argue, are not evidence of a thoroughgoing subjectivity, but glimpses of a nascent, fragmentary and problematic selfhood, often kept forcibly in check by strict observance of religious routines and adherence to restrictive textual conventions for recording life events. Those textual conventions, I claim, are best uncovered by attending – where possible – to the material texts of the various autobiographical sources I consult. From predominantly manuscript sources, I present examples of writers, for instance, using prescriptive methods such as that of financial accounting, or collecting and adapting non-original material to account for their illnesses, neither of which techniques suggests an introspective and sustained expression of selfhood in sickness. I present chapters examining descriptions of personal illness in diaries, autobiography, letters and poetry, attending in each case to the ways in which illness and identity are written and rewritten. My evidence suggests that a sense of collectivity appears to dominate the life-writing of illness, one in which the subject is frequently defined by his or her participation in familial, social or religious networks, and in which material from other texts is collected and redeployed to account for events in an individual life. The textual frameworks examined in this thesis, I hold, are readily adaptable to accommodate and treat moments of personal crisis such as illness

    Spartan Daily, March 21, 1986

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    Volume 86, Issue 38https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/7427/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, March 21, 1986

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    Volume 86, Issue 38https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/7427/thumbnail.jp

    The BG News April 26, 2002

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    The BGSU campus student newspaper April 26, 2002. Volume 89 - Issue 66https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/7959/thumbnail.jp

    The Tri-State Defender, Part 1, January 28, 1956

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    A critical edition of six occasional sermons by Jeremy Taylor (1613-1667).

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:D86435 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Spectator 1941-12-19

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    Santa Fe New Mexican, 11-19-1913

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    https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/4957/thumbnail.jp

    Casco Bay Weekly : 25 April 1991

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    https://digitalcommons.portlandlibrary.com/cbw_1991/1050/thumbnail.jp
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