Posthuman Lear : Reading Shakespeare in the Anthropocene

Bibliographic Details
Title: Posthuman Lear : Reading Shakespeare in the Anthropocene
Authors: Dionne, Craig
Superior Title: MODID-39cf4671f8e:Punctum Books
Publisher Information: Punctum Books
Publication Year: 2016
Subject Terms: Literary Criticism / Medieval, bisacsh:LIT011000
Description: Approaching King Lear from an eco-materialist perspective, Posthuman Lear examines how the shift in Shakespeare’s tragedy from court to stormy heath activates a different sense of language as tool-being — from that of participating in the flourish of aristocratic prodigality and circumstance, to that of survival and pondering one’s interdependence with a denuded world. Dionne frames the thematic arc of Shakespeare’s tragedy about the fall of a king as a tableaux of our post-sustainable condition. For Dionne, Lear’s progress on the heath works as a parable of flat ontology. At the center of Dionne’s analysis of rhetoric and prodigality in the tragedy is the argument that adages and proverbs, working as embodied forms of speech, offer insight into a nonhuman, fragmentary mode of consciousness. The Renaissance fascination with memory and proverbs provides an opportunity to reflect on the human as an instance of such enmeshed being where the habit of articulating memorized patterns of speech works on a somatic level. Dionne theorizes how mnemonic memory functions as a potentially empowering mode of consciousness inherited by our evolutionary history as a species, revealing how our minds work as imprinted machines to recall past prohibitions and useful affective scripts to aid in our interaction with the environment. The proverb is that linguistic inscription that defines the equivalent of human-animal imprinting, where the past is etched upon collective memory within ‘adagential” being that lives on through the generations as autonomic cues for survival.
Document Type: book
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
ISBN: 978-0-692-64157-6
0-692-64157-2
Relation: https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/eede0ca8-9626-47b2-b7d9-cdb06d02662a; https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/eede0ca8-9626-47b2-b7d9-cdb06d02662a/assets/external_content.pdf
DOI: 10.21983/P3.0133.1.00
Availability: https://doi.org/10.21983/P3.0133.1.00
https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/eede0ca8-9626-47b2-b7d9-cdb06d02662a
https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/eede0ca8-9626-47b2-b7d9-cdb06d02662a/assets/external_content.pdf
Rights: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode
Accession Number: edsbas.487212A3
Database: BASE
Description
Description not available.