The Curious Eye: Optics and Imaginative Literature in Seventeenth-Century England

The Curious Eye: Optics and Imaginative Literature in Seventeenth-Century England

by Erin Webster
The Curious Eye: Optics and Imaginative Literature in Seventeenth-Century England

The Curious Eye: Optics and Imaginative Literature in Seventeenth-Century England

by Erin Webster

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Overview

The Curious Eye explores early modern debates over two related questions: what are the limits of human vision, and to what extent can these limits be overcome by technological enhancement? In our everyday lives, we rely on optical technology to provide us with information about visually remote spaces even as we question the efficacy and ethics of such pursuits. But the debates surrounding the subject of technologically mediated vision have their roots in a much older literary tradition in which the ability to see beyond the limits of natural human vision is associated with philosophical and spiritual insight as well as social and political control. The Curious Eye provides insight into the subject of optically-mediated vision by returning to the literature of the seventeenth century, the historical moment in which human visual capacity in the West was first extended through the application of optical technologies to the eye. Bringing imaginative literary works by Francis Bacon, John Milton, Margaret Cavendish, and Aphra Behn together with optical and philosophical treatises by Johannes Kepler, René Descartes, Robert Hooke, Robert Boyle, and Isaac Newton, the volume explores the social and intellectual impact of the new optical technologies of the seventeenth century on its literature. At the same time, it demonstrates that social, political, and literary concerns are not peripheral to the optical science of the period but, rather, an integral part of it, the legacy of which we continue to experience.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780192590589
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Publication date: 02/20/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Erin Webster is an Assistant Professor of English at William&Mary, where she teaches courses in early modern literature, including Milton, and on the intersection of literature and scientific thought.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Poetry as Optical Technology
2. Language Reform and the Lens of Simile in Experimentalist Texts
3. Envisioning Empire in Bacon, Hooke, and Cavendish
4. The Physics of Vision in Kepler, Descartes, and Milton
5. Perspective as a Conceptual Tool in Milton and Newton
6. The Optics of Virtue in Boyle, Cowley, and Behn
Postscript: Prosthetic and Embodied Vision
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