ABSTRACT

First published in 2000. Did people in early modern Europe have a concept of an inner self? Carla Mazzio and Douglas Trevor have brought together an outstanding group of literary, cultural, and history scholars to answer this intriguing question. Through a synthesis of historicism and psychoanalytic criticism, the contributors explore the complicated, nuanced, and often surprising union of history and subjectivity in Europe centuries before psychoanalytic theory. Addressing such topics as "fetishes and Renaissances," "the cartographic unconscious," and "the topographic imaginary," these essays move beyond the strict boundaries of historicism and psychoanalysis to carve out new histories of interiority in early modern Europe.

chapter One|18 pages

Dreams Of History

An Introduction

part 1|116 pages

Fielding Questions

chapter Three|23 pages

Dreams of Field

Early Modern (Dis)Positions

chapter Four|23 pages

Toward a Topographic Imaginary

Early Modern Paris

chapter Five|28 pages

“To Please The Wiser Sort”

Violence and Philosophy in Hamlet

part 2|124 pages

Graphic Imaginations

chapter Seven|21 pages

Erotic Islands

Contours of Villon's Printed Testament (1489)

chapter Nine|42 pages

The Melancholy of Print

Love's Labour's Lost

part 3|90 pages

Depth Perceptions

chapter Eleven|12 pages

The Anus in Coriolanus

chapter Twelve|27 pages

Breaking the Mirror Stage

chapter Thirteen|26 pages

The Inside Story

part 4|48 pages

Legacies

chapter Fifteen|26 pages

Weeping for Hecuba

chapter Sixteen|21 pages

Second-Best Bed