Shakespeare and Science
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As a figurehead for the literary humanities, and a dramatist whose
plays feature fairies, ghosts, and spirits, Shakespeare may not be
the first author that comes to mind when thinking about science.
Tom Rutter shows, however, that in his plays and poetry Shakespeare
made detailed use of the knowledge and theories of the cosmos, the
natural world, and human biology that were available to him. These
range from astronomical and anatomical ideas derived from medieval
scholars, Islamic philosophers, and ancient Greek and Roman
authorities, through to the challenges issued to those earlier
models by more recent figures such as Copernicus and Vesalius.
Shakespeare''s treatment of these materials was informed by the
poetic and dramatic media in which he worked; the dialogic nature
of drama enabled an approach that could be provisional,
exploratory, and tolerant of uncertainty and contradiction.
Shakespeare made the early modern playhouse a venue for the
production of scientific understanding through performance,
illusion, and the creative use of space.As well as surveying
current scholarship that contextualizes Shakespeare''s work in
relation to histories of meteorology, matter theory, humoral
physiology, racialization, mathematics, and more, Shakespeare and
Science offers detailed original readings of a variety of texts
including the Histories, Hamlet, Antony and Cleopatra, Othello,
King Lear, The Tempest, the Sonnets, and Lucrece. It also makes
extensive reference to works by Shakespeare''s near-contemporaries
such as Robert Recorde, William Fulke, Juan Huarte, and Thomas
Elyot. Its four chapters focus on astronomy and meteorology,
matter, the body, and mathematics. Rutter''s overall approach is
informed by recent studies that interrogate ''science'' as a
concept, and that question both the boundary between literature and
science and the idea of a seventeenth-century ''scientific
revolution''.