Front cover image for Excess and the mean in early modern English literature

Excess and the mean in early modern English literature

This book examines how English writers from the Elizabethan period to the Restoration transformed and contested the ancient ideal of the virtuous mean. As early modern authors learned at grammar school and university, Aristotle and other classical thinkers praised "golden means" balanced between extremes: courage, for example, as opposed to cowardice or recklessness. By uncovering the enormous variety of English responses to this ethical doctrine, Joshua Scodel revises our understanding of the vital interaction between classical thought and early modern literary culture. --From publisher's description
eBook, English, ©2002
Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., ©2002
Criticism, interpretation, etc
1 online resource (viii, 367 pages)
9781400814633, 9780691090283, 9781400824939, 1400814634, 0691090289, 1400824931
52244976
Introduction: ancient paradigms in modern conflicts
pt. 1. Two early modern revisions of the mean
1. Donne and the personal mean
2. "Mediocrities" and "extremities": Baconian flexibility and the Aristotelian mean
pt. 2. Means and extremes in early modern Georgic
3. Moderation, temperate climate, and national ethos from Spenser to Milton
4. Concord, conquest, and commerce from Spenser to Cowley
pt. 3. Erotic excess and early modern social conflicts
5. Passionate extremes and noble natures from Elizabethan to Caroline literature
6. Erotic excess versus interest in mid- to late-seventeenth-century literature
pt. 4. Moderation and excess in the seveneteenth-century symposiastic lyric
7. Drinking and the politics of poetic identity from Jonson to Herrick
8. Drinking and cultural conflict from Lovelace to Rochester
pt. 5. Reimagining moderation: the Miltonic example
9. Paradise lost, pleasurable restraint, and the mean of self-respect
Postscript: sublime excess, dull moderation, and contemporary ambivalence