1st Edition

Lacan, Foucault, and the Malleable Subject in Early Modern English Utopian Literature

By Dan Mills Copyright 2020
274 Pages
by Routledge

274 Pages
by Routledge

274 Pages
by Routledge

Theoretically informed scholarship on early modern English utopian literature has largely focused on Marxist interpretation of these texts in an attempt to characterize them as proto- Marxist. The present volume instead focuses on subjectivity in early modern English utopian writing by using these texts as case studies to explore intersections of the thought of Jacques Lacan and Michel Foucault.... Read more

List of Figures

Preface

Acknowledgements

SECTION 1: INTRODUCTORY MATTERS

Chapter 1
Introducing Utopia

Chapter 2
Utopian Studies, Modern and Early Modern: A Nice Place to Visit

Chapter 3
Lacan avec Foucault

Chapter 4
"If Only this were some day possible": The Execration, Consecration, and Catechization of Humanist Optimism in Thomas More’s Utopia

SECTION 2: the UTOPIAN symbolic
Chapter 5

Stealth Self on the Shelf: Surveillance, Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis, and Symbolic Subjectivity


Chapter 6

Power is Knowledge: Surveillance, Biopower and Linguistic Subjectivity in John Eliot’s Christian Commonwealth


Chapter 7

Linguistic Subjectivity and Linguistic Utopia in Francis Lodwick’s A Country not Named

SECTION 3: the UTOPIAN imaginary


Chapter 8

"Out of the Authority of the Arabians": Orientalism and Utopian Intellectual History in Robert Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy


Chapter 9

Gerrard Winstanley’s Utopian Mission


Chapter 10

Margaret Cavendish’s Book of Imaginary Beings: Philosophical Animals and Physiognomic Philosophers in The Blazing World

SECTION 4: The Three UTOPIAN reals


Chapter 11
Joseph Hall’s Mundus alter et idem and Geo-satirical Indictment of the English Crown


Chapter 12

James Harrington’s Commonwealth of Oceana and Typographical Utopia

Chapter 13
Pornographic Miscegenation and Dystopic Apocalypse in Henry Neville's Isle of Pines


Chapter 14: CONCLUSIONS AND AN ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Biography

Dan Mills has an MA and PhD in English from Georgia State University, where he focused his studies on early modern English literature and theory and wrote his dissertation on early modern English utopian literature. He recently completed an MA in Latin at the University of Georgia. In addition to early modern English literature and theory, his research interests include bibliography and print culture, translation studies, and neo-Latin.