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Rethinking Science and Religion in Early Modern Culture
Rethinking Science and Religion in Early Modern Culture
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Description
Early modern Europe provides a rich context from which to challenge the rigid opposition between science and religion in this bold new edited collection. Contributors reveal how modes of science or natural philosophy, and religion, were mutually interdependent, even if they were also fluid and contested. Essays break new ground by situating texts and artefacts of early modern science and religion in terms of contemporary scholarly developments, including ecocriticism, postcolonial, race and affect studies. By foregrounding questions of gender, embodiment, evidence and the historical formation of scientific colonialism, this collection locates the early modern body and its empirical study as a source of both religious and scientific knowledge.
Essays cover the soteriological body at the heart of Andreas Vesalius' seminal studies of anatomy, depictions of the hymen in Shakespeare and medical texts and forms of empiricism in John Donne. Where some of the essays address non-literary works, many chapters explore the role of imaginative literature and aesthetics more broadly. Beyond the centrality of Protestant Christianity to early modern European science, some contributors consider the influence of hermetic writings on Francis Bacon and read the Mayan K'iche' epic of creation known as the Popul Wuj alongside Milton's Paradise Lost. These inquiries demonstrate the value of comparative perspectives in a period in which radical social, political and religious changes caused a series of epistemic ruptures.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Sarah Keleher (University of California, Berkeley), “Anatomy and Salvation History in Andreas Vesalius's De humani corporis fabrica (1543)”
Chapter 2: Amy Cooper (US Air Force Academy, USA), “From the Cedar to the Hyssop: Bacon, Sloane, and the House of Solomon”
Chapter 3: Pavneet Aulakh (Vanderbilt University, USA), “Reading the Book of God's Works: Donne's Science of Occasional Reflection”
Chapter 4: Benjamin Parris (University of Pittsburgh, USA), “Envisioning a Global Infinite: Divinity, Darkness, and the Limits of Human Sight in The Popul Vuh and Paradise Lost”
Chapter 5: Margaret Ferguson (University of California, Davis), “Hymens as Evidence of Things Unseen”
Chapter 6: Steven Swarbrick (Baruch College, City University of New York, USA), “Senseless Things: Shakespeare, Money, and Erototheology”
Chapter 7: Jacqueline L. Cowan (Red Deer Polytechnic, Canada), “A 'Goldmine of Inspiration:' Literature's Role in the Science and Religion of Richard Dawkins and Thomas Sprat”
Index
Product details
| Published | 06 Aug 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 256 |
| ISBN | 9781350511620 |
| Imprint | The Arden Shakespeare |
| Dimensions | 216 x 138 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |

























