Vital Strife: Sleep, Insomnia, and the Early Modern Ethics of Care
Vital Strife examines the close yet puzzling relationship between sleep and ethical care in early modernity. The plays, poems, and philosophical essays at the heart of this book-by Jasper Heywood, William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser, John Milton, and Margaret Cavendish-explore the unconscious motion...
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Zusammenfassung: | Vital Strife examines the
close yet puzzling relationship between sleep and ethical care in
early modernity. The plays, poems, and philosophical
essays at the heart of this book-by Jasper Heywood, William
Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser, John Milton, and Margaret
Cavendish-explore the unconscious motions of corporeal life and the
drowsy forms of sentience at the boundaries of human thought and
intentionality. Benjamin Parris shows how these writers, although
trained under the Renaissance humanist paradigm of attentive care,
begin to dissolve the humanist coupling of virtue with vigilance by
giving credence to the vital power of sleep.
In contrast to humanist thinkers who equated sleep with
carelessness, these writers draw on the ancient Stoic principle of
oikeiôsis -the process of orienting the living being toward
its proper objects of care, beginning with itself-in asserting the
value of sleep, while underscoring insomnia's threat to the ethical
flourishing of persons and polity alike. Parris offers an important
revaluation of Stoic philosophy, which has too often been
misconstrued as renouncing feeling and sympathetic connection with
others. With its striking new account of the reception of Stoicism
and attitudes toward sleep and sleeplessness in early modern
thought, Vital Strife reveals the period's mounting
concern with the regenerative nature of physical life and its
elaboration of a newfound ethics of care. |
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