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Persecutory Imagination English Puritanism and the Literature of Religious Despair

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ISBN-10: 0198117817

ISBN-13: 9780198117810

Edition: 1991

Authors: John Stachniewski

List price: $145.00
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Innumerable men and women in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were gripped by the anxiety, often conviction, that they were doomed to go to hell. This condition of mind was commonly enmeshed with such circumstances as parental severity, social exclusion, and economic decline, which seemed to give cogency to a Calvinist theology specializing in the idea of rejection. This book investigates how a menacing discourse compounding theology and social experience constructs subjectivity and shapes texts. Looking at a variety of sources, including puritan autobiographies and works by Bunyan, Burton, Donne, Marlowe, and Milton the book challenges both the assumption of authorial autonomy…    
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Book details

List price: $145.00
Copyright year: 1991
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 7/25/1991
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Size: 5.75" wide x 8.81" long x 1.12" tall
Weight: 1.474
Language: English

John Bunyan was born in Elstow, Bedfordshire, England, in 1628. He learned to read and write at the village school and was prepared to follow his father's trade as a brazier when the English Civil War broke out in 1644 and he was drafted into the Parliamentary army. His military service brought him into contact with Oliver Cromwell's Puritan troops. Beginning in 1648, Bunyan suffered a crisis in religious faith that lasted for several years. He turned to the Nonconformist church in Bedford to sustain him during this period. His first writings were attacks against the Quakers. Then Charles II was restored to the throne and Bunyan was arrested for conducting services not in accordance with…