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Theologies of Pain: Literary Bodies and Afflicted Forms in Puritan New England [Kõva köide]

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With the arrival of Puritan settlers in New England in the middle decades of the 17th-century, accounts of sickness, colonial violence, and painful religious transformation quickly emerged, enabling new forms of testimonial writing in prose and poetry. Investigating a broad transatlantic archive of religious literature, historical medical science, and philosophies of sensation, this book explores how Puritan America contemplated pain and ascribed meaning to it in writing.

By weaving the experience of pained bodies into popular public discourse, Hardy shows how Puritans imagined the pained Christian body, whilst simultaneously marginalizing and vilifying those who expressed suffering by different measures, including Indigenous Americans and unorthodox colonists. Focusing on pain as it emerged from spaces of inchoate settlement and colonial violence, he provides new understandings of early American nationalism and connected racial tropes which persist today.

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Hardy curates a compelling archive of writing about pain from antiquity to the present that creates a rich interpretive context for New England Puritan writing. His examination of discourses of pain offers a fresh approach to familiar Puritan authors, genres, and tropes. * Elisabeth Ceppi, Professor of English, Portland State University, USA *

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Mining unexplored discourses of pain in New England literary texts, this book shows how pain was central in shaping New England culture, identity, early American nationalism and racial tropes.

Introduction: Themes and Forms of Puritan Pain
Chapter 1: Sublimated Pain and the Doctrine of Affliction in New England
Chapter 2: Anne Bradstreet's Poetics of Pain
Chapter 3: Humoral Hegemony and Racialized Pain in Mary Rowlandson's Sovereignty and Goodness of God
Chapter 4: Rethinking Pain in Eighteenth-Century New England
Coda: Women's Bodies and the Limits of Affliction
Bibliography
Index

Lucas Hardy is Associate Professor of English at Youngstown State University, USA.