For many years, scholarship on Thomas Browne (1605-1682) saw him as tangential to his periodâs thought and writing: an obscure and quaint stylist, detached from the turbulence of mid-seventeenth century England. This volume contributes to the current reevalution of Browneâs involvement in his times: identifying his political commitments, milieu, reading, and readers. The essays collected in this volume place Browneâs works in unexpected contexts â in Holland, Poland and Germany, in Restoration politics, in publishing history and medical theory. It presents new research into his reputation in the later seventeenth century, his manuscripts, medical dissertation, association with the Hartlib circle and habits of revision. Essays on familiar works place them in new light, while readings of his letters, notebooks, and lesser works broaden our understanding of Browne as a writer. The result is a fuller picture of Browneâs significance in seventeenth-century European culture.
Contributors include: Eric Achermann, Hugh Adlington, Reid Barbour, Harm Beukers, Siobhán Collins, Louise Denmead, Karen Edwards, Doris Einsiedel, Kevin Killeen, Mary Ann Lund, Philip Major, Antonia Moon, Kathryn Murphy, Brent Nelson, and Claire Preston.
Kathryn Murphy is Junior Research Fellow in English at Jesus College, Oxford. She writes on early modern literature, particularly prose.
Richard Todd is Professor of British literature at after 1500 at Leiden University. He has published on many aspects of the early modern period, most recently on textual scholarship, and on contemporary British fiction.
Acknowledgements
Note on the Text
Abbreviations
List of Contributors
INTRODUCTION
âBetween the Paws of a Sphinxâ: The Contexts of Thomas Browne, Kathryn Murphy
I. BROWNE IN LEIDEN
Discipline and Praxis: Thomas Browne in Leiden, Reid Barbour
Studying Medicine in Leiden in the 1630s, Harm Beukers
II. READING AND WRITING
âA Fresh Reading of Booksâ: Some Note-Taking Practices of Thomas Browne, Antonia Moon
Divination in Pseudodoxia Epidemica: Thomas Browneâs Habits of Revision, Hugh Adlington
III. FORM AND CONTENT
Curious Readers and Meditative Form in Thomas Browneâs Urne-Buriall, Brent Nelson
âThere is all Africa ⦠within usâ: Language, Generation and Alchemy in Browneâs Explication of Blackness, Siobhán Collins and Louise Denmead
Of Cyder and Sallets: The Hortulan Saints and The Garden of Cyrus, Claire Preston
IV. THE TURBULENCE OF THE TIME
âIn the Time of the Late Civil Warsâ: Post-Restoration Browne and the Political Memory of Repertorium, Kevin Killeen Urne-Buriall and the Interregnum Royalist, Philip Major
Thomas Browne and the Absurdities of Melancholy, Karen L. Edwards
V. READING AND TRANSLATING BROWNE
The Christian Physician: Thomas Browne and the Role of Religion in Medical Practice, Mary Ann Lund
Order in the Vortex: Christian Knorr von Rosenroth as Compiler and Translator of Thomas Browne, Jean dâEspagnet, Henry More, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Antoine le Grand, Eric Achermann (trans. Kathryn Murphy and Doris Einsiedel)
âThe Best Pillar of the Order of Sir Francisâ: Thomas Browne, Samuel Hartlib and Communities of Learning, Kathryn Murphy
Bibliography
Index Nominum
All those interested in seventeenth-century literature, intellectual history, the Republic of Letters, history of medicine, reading and the book, and early modern literary relations between England and mainland Europe.