Robert Burton’s Rhetoric

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A01=Susan Wells
Author_Susan Wells
Category=CFG
Category=GTC
disciplinary history
early modern literature
early modern rhetoric
early modern science
early modern thought
English intellectual history
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
history of emotions
history of knowledge
history of medicine
interdisciplinary
knowledge organization
literature and medicine
medical humanities
melancholy
melancholy in literature
rhetoric
rhetoric and knowledge
rhetoric and persuasion
rhetoric of health
rhetoric of medicine
Robert Burton
Robert Burton studies
seventeenth century England
The Anatomy of Melancholy
transdisciplinar
transdisciplinary scholarship

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271084664
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 May 2021
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Published in five editions between 1621 and 1651, The Anatomy of Melancholy marks a unique moment in the development of disciplines, when fields of knowledge were distinct but not yet restrictive. In Robert Burton’s Rhetoric, Susan Wells analyzes the Anatomy, demonstrating how its early modern practices of knowledge and persuasion can offer a model for transdisciplinary scholarship today.

In the first decades of the seventeenth century, Robert Burton attempted to gather all the existing knowledge about melancholy, drawing from professional discourses including theology, medicine, and philology as well as the emerging sciences. Examining this text through a rhetorical lens, Wells provides an account of these disciplinary exchanges in all their subtle variety and abundant wit, showing that questions of how knowledge is organized and how it is made persuasive are central to rhetorical theory. Ultimately, Wells argues that in addition to a book about melancholy, Burton’s Anatomy is a meditation on knowledge.

A fresh interpretation of The Anatomy of Melancholy, this volume will be welcomed by scholars of early modern English and the rhetorics of health and medicine, as well as those interested in transdisciplinary work and rhetorical theory.

Susan Wells is Professor of English Emerita at Temple University. She is the author of Sweet Reason: Rhetoric and the Discourses of Modernity; Out of the Dead House: Nineteenth-Century Women Physicians and the Writing of Medicine; and “Our Bodies, Ourselves” and the Work of Writing.

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