Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England
My dissertation, Unspeakable Joy: Rejoicing in Early Modern England, claims that the act of rejoicing--expressing religious joy--was a crucial rhetorical element of literary works in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century in England. The expression of religious joy in literature functioned...
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ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-53872019-10-13T05:06:40Z Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England Lambert, James Schroder My dissertation, Unspeakable Joy: Rejoicing in Early Modern England, claims that the act of rejoicing--expressing religious joy--was a crucial rhetorical element of literary works in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century in England. The expression of religious joy in literature functioned as a sign of belief and sanctification in English Protestant theology, and became the emotive articulation of a hopeful union between earthly passion and an anticipated heavenly feeling. By taking into account the historical-theological definitions of joy in the reformed tradition, I offer new readings of late sixteenth-century and early seventeenth-century texts, including the Sidney Psalms, Donne's sermons, Spenser's Epithalamion, Richard Rogers's spiritual diaries, and Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale. I suggest that much of early modern poetics stems from a desire, on behalf of writers, to articulate the ineffable joy so often described by sermons and tracts. By establishing Renaissance emotional expression as a source of religious epistemology and negotiating the cognitive and constructive understandings of emotion, I show that religious rejoicing in Elizabethan Protestantism consists of a series of emotive speech acts designed to imitate the hoped-for joys of heaven. Finally, these readings emphasize the ways in which rejoicing not only functions as a reaffirmation of belief in and commitment to the state church but also becomes the primary agent for spiritual affect by bestowing grace on an individual believer. 2012-07-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1348 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5387&context=etd Copyright 2012 James S. Lambert Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaSnider, Alvin Martin, 1954- Emotion Joy Protestant Puritan Rejoicing Renaissance English Language and Literature |
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Emotion Joy Protestant Puritan Rejoicing Renaissance English Language and Literature |
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Emotion Joy Protestant Puritan Rejoicing Renaissance English Language and Literature Lambert, James Schroder Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England |
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My dissertation, Unspeakable Joy: Rejoicing in Early Modern England, claims that the act of rejoicing--expressing religious joy--was a crucial rhetorical element of literary works in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century in England. The expression of religious joy in literature functioned as a sign of belief and sanctification in English Protestant theology, and became the emotive articulation of a hopeful union between earthly passion and an anticipated heavenly feeling. By taking into account the historical-theological definitions of joy in the reformed tradition, I offer new readings of late sixteenth-century and early seventeenth-century texts, including the Sidney Psalms, Donne's sermons, Spenser's Epithalamion, Richard Rogers's spiritual diaries, and Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale. I suggest that much of early modern poetics stems from a desire, on behalf of writers, to articulate the ineffable joy so often described by sermons and tracts. By establishing Renaissance emotional expression as a source of religious epistemology and negotiating the cognitive and constructive understandings of emotion, I show that religious rejoicing in Elizabethan Protestantism consists of a series of emotive speech acts designed to imitate the hoped-for joys of heaven. Finally, these readings emphasize the ways in which rejoicing not only functions as a reaffirmation of belief in and commitment to the state church but also becomes the primary agent for spiritual affect by bestowing grace on an individual believer. |
author2 |
Snider, Alvin Martin, 1954- |
author_facet |
Snider, Alvin Martin, 1954- Lambert, James Schroder |
author |
Lambert, James Schroder |
author_sort |
Lambert, James Schroder |
title |
Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England |
title_short |
Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England |
title_full |
Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England |
title_fullStr |
Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England |
title_full_unstemmed |
Unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern England |
title_sort |
unspeakable joy : rejoicing in early modern england |
publisher |
University of Iowa |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1348 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5387&context=etd |
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AT lambertjamesschroder unspeakablejoyrejoicinginearlymodernengland |
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