Shakespeare's Botanical Imagination / / ed. by Susan C. Staub.

Writing on the cusp of modern botany and during the heyday of English herbals and garden manuals, Shakespeare references at least 180 plants in his works and makes countless allusions to horticultural and botanical practices. Shakespeare’s Botanical Imagination moves plants to the foreground of anal...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Amsterdam University Press Complete eBook-Package 2023
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Amsterdam : : Amsterdam University Press, , [2023]
©2023
Year of Publication:2023
Language:English
Series:Environmental Humanities in Pre-Modern Cultures ; 5
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (302 p.)
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Description
Other title:Frontmatter --
Table of Contents --
List of Figures --
Acknowledgments --
Introduction --
Part 1. Plant Power and Agency --
1. Vegetable Virtues --
2. The “idle weeds that grow in the sustaining corn”: Generating Plants in King Lear --
3. Botanical Barbary: Punning, Race, and Plant Life in Othello 4.3 --
Part 2. Human-Vegetable Affinities and Transformations --
4. Shakespeare’s Botanical Grace --
5. “Circummured” Plants and Women in Measure for Measure --
6. Cymbeline’s Plant People --
7. ‘Thou art translated’: Plants of Passage in A Midsummer Night’s Dream --
Part 3. Plants and Temporalities --
8. Clockwork Plants and Shakespeare’s Overlapping Notions of Time --
9. The Verdant Imagination in Shakespeare’s Sonnets --
10. The Botanical Revisions of 3 Henry VI --
11. Botanomorphism and Temporality: Imagining Humans as Plants in Two Shakespeare Plays --
Afterword --
Index
Summary:Writing on the cusp of modern botany and during the heyday of English herbals and garden manuals, Shakespeare references at least 180 plants in his works and makes countless allusions to horticultural and botanical practices. Shakespeare’s Botanical Imagination moves plants to the foreground of analysis and brings together some of the rich and innovative ways that scholars are expanding the discussion of plants and botany in Shakespeare’s writings. The essays gathered here all emphasize the interdependence and entanglement of plants with humans and human life, whether culturally, socially, or materially, and vividly illustrate the fundamental role plants play in human identity. As they attend to the affinities and shared materiality between plants and humans in Shakespeare’s works, these essays complicate the comfortable Aristotelian hierarchy of human-animal-plant. And as they do, they often challenge the privileged position of humans in relation to non-human life.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9789048551101
9783111023748
9783111318103
9783111319032
9783111319292
9783111318912
DOI:10.1515/9789048551101?locatt=mode:legacy
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: ed. by Susan C. Staub.