Praise Disjoined: Changing Patterns of Salvation in 17th-century English LiteratureWilliam P. Shaw P. Lang, 1991 - Počet stran: 306 Growing skepticism and rationalism contributed to the decline of religious enthusiasm in England in the seventeenth century, and time-honored notions about salvation and damnation became increasingly vitiated by secular, pragmatic concerns. This important collection of essays investigates the ways important writers of the age forcefully renegotiated their understanding of the terms of salvation and damnation, either affirming the old or accomodating some new understanding. After the Puritan Revolution had run its course, the end of the century witnessed a new consensus, one more deferential to individualism, utilitarianism, and secular millenarianism than to the hierarchical orders inherent in Christian feudalism and monarchy. |
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Strana 131
... desire to punish himself for what was negative and regressive in his personality.22 This conflict further manifested itself in an ambivalent desire to be accepted as court poet 21 Dutton 145-47 ; perhaps Jonson's secret service to ...
... desire to punish himself for what was negative and regressive in his personality.22 This conflict further manifested itself in an ambivalent desire to be accepted as court poet 21 Dutton 145-47 ; perhaps Jonson's secret service to ...
Strana 179
... desire — this strategy only discloses the corporeal basis of attrition . This radical attempt to assert or to gain the assurance which the second sonnet could not attain in its own witty attempt to cover over man's sins is shown to be ...
... desire — this strategy only discloses the corporeal basis of attrition . This radical attempt to assert or to gain the assurance which the second sonnet could not attain in its own witty attempt to cover over man's sins is shown to be ...
Strana 185
... desire of his self ; but " falls " back again into the dominating present of limitation , confinement , and imprisonment by the physical absence of wholeness . Just as the first quatrain was dominated by reference to and the perspective ...
... desire of his self ; but " falls " back again into the dominating present of limitation , confinement , and imprisonment by the physical absence of wholeness . Just as the first quatrain was dominated by reference to and the perspective ...
Obsah
Introduction | 1 |
Rhetoric and Salvation in the Seventeenth Century | 51 |
The Puritan Rhetoric of Childbearing | 73 |
Autorská práva | |
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