Exquisite Mixture


The Virtues of Impurity in Early Modern England

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By Wolfram Schmidgen
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
256

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Description

Wolfram Schmidgen is Professor of English at Washington University in St. Louis. He is also the author of Eighteenth-Century Fiction and the Law of Property.

Preface Introduction: England's Mixed Genius Chapter 1. The Science of Mixture Chapter 2. The Politics of Deformity Chapter 3. Locke's Mixed Liberty Conclusion: Undividing Modernity Notes Bibliography Index Acknowledgments

"For Wolfram Schmidgen, mixture used to be construed as a transgressor or a threat, but in the new globalized context it has become the norm. His book will stimulate readers to think afresh on issues that have not gone away. Western culture still has to work out how to accommodate diversity, not least when it comes to sectarian categories based on race, gender, class, or religion." (TLS) "[Schmidgen] has set a new agenda for intellectual historians of the English Enlightenment." (Journal of Modern History) "Brilliant and erudite. Wolfram Schmidgen shows that literary, scientific, and philosophical writers in early modern England often go beyond contemporary thinkers in their affirmation of the virtues of multiplicity and mixture. An important contribution to the intellectual history of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Britain that illuminates contemporary discussions of identity, postcoloniality, migration, and globalization." (Michael Hardt, Duke University) "With Exquisite Mixture, Wolfram Schmidgen shows us why mixture was not derivative and secondary but an active and productive process: it offered natural philosophers like Boyle a way to study complex living things, and it allowed a wide spectrum of political and religious thinkers a way to understand politics as communal, dependent upon the multitude, contingent and therefore open to transformation." (William Warner, University of California, Santa Barbara) "This is an impressive piece of work written by a talented and well-informed author who has spent a lot of time thinking about mixture, multitudes, hybridity and bastardy-a book that is sure to have a large influence." (Jonathan Lamb, Vanderbilt University)

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