Edition |
1st American ed. |
Description |
xviii, 573 pages ; 25 cm |
Note |
Originally published: London : Allen Lane, 2003. |
Summary |
"How did we come to a modern understanding of our bodies and souls? ... Roy Porter charts how, through figures as diverse as Locke, Swift, Johnson, and Gibbon, ideas about medicine, politics, and religion fundamentally changed notions of self"--p. [2] of jacket. |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 475-555) and index. |
Contents |
Know yourself -- Religion and the soul -- Medicine and the body -- The rational self -- Science rescues the spirit -- John Locke rewrites the soul -- The spectator : the polite self in the polite body -- Shaftesbury and Mandeville -- Swift and the Scriblerans : nightmare selves -- Johnson and incorporated minds -- Edward Gibbon : fame and mortality -- This mortal coil -- Flesh and form -- Putting on a face -- Sexing the self -- Telling yourself -- And who are you? -- Unreason -- Scottish selves -- Psychologizing the self -- Industrial bodies -- Dependent bodies -- William Godwin : awakening the mind -- William Blake : the body mystical -- Byron : sexy satire -- The march of mind. |
Subject |
English literature -- 18th century -- History and criticism.
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English literature. |
Chronological Term |
18th century |
Subject |
Human body in literature.
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Human body in literature. |
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Great Britain -- Intellectual life -- 18th century.
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Great Britain. |
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Intellectual life. |
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Enlightenment -- Great Britain.
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Enlightenment. |
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Mind and body in literature.
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Mind and body in literature. |
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Rationalism in literature.
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Rationalism in literature. |
ISBN |
0393050750 |
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