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The Two-Soul'd Animal: Early Modern Literatures of the Classical and Christian Souls
Contributor(s): Lee, James Jaehoon (Author)
ISBN: 081013926X     ISBN-13: 9780810139268
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
OUR PRICE:   $34.60  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: March 2019
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Renaissance
- Literary Criticism | English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Dewey: 820.938
LCCN: 2018049331
Physical Information: 0.5" H x 5.9" W x 8.8" (0.55 lbs) 200 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The Two-Soul'd Animal illuminates an early modern debate that recognized the troubling extent to which Christian thought had defined the human in terms of two incompatible models of soul. As the sixteenth century progressed, Christian and humanist thinkers began to realize that these two souls fundamentally contradicted each other. On the one hand, Christian theology had a great debt to Aristotle's tripartite model of the soul based on three organic faculties: intellection, sensation, and nutrition. On the other, the Christian soul was defined by its immortal, immaterial, and transcendental substance. The sixteenth-century acknowledgement of the two souls provoked a great deal of anxiety, leading Christian thinkers to ask: How can we, as God's perfect design, have two redundant and yet contradictory souls? And how could the core of the religious subject possibly be defined by a psychological paradox? As a result, the "soul" was an intrinsically unstable term being renegotiated in Renaissance culture.

The English writers studied in The Two-Soul'd Animal place two prevailing interpretations of the soul's faculties--one rhetorical on the plane of aesthetics, the other theological on the plane of ethics--into contact as a way to construct a new mode of Christian agency.