The Mental Anatomies of William Godwin and Mary ShelleyFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2001 - 246 pages This book explores the influence of Enlightenment and Romantic-era theories of the mind on the writings of Godwin and Shelley and examines the ways in which these writers use their fiction to explore such psychological phenomena as ruling passions, madness, the therapeutic value of confessions (both spoken and written), and the significance of dreams. Unlike most studies of Godwin and Shelley, it does not privilege their masterworks -- for the most part, it focuses on their lesser-known writings. Brewer also considers the works of other Romantic-era writers, as well as the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophical and medical theories that informed Godwin's and Shelley's presentations of mental states and types of behavior. |
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Page 131
... appear to me to have lost the faculty of reasoning , but having joined together some ideas very wrongly , they mistake them for truths ; and they err as men do that argue right from wrong principles . For , by the violence of their ...
... appear to me to have lost the faculty of reasoning , but having joined together some ideas very wrongly , they mistake them for truths ; and they err as men do that argue right from wrong principles . For , by the violence of their ...
Page 158
... appear to prefigure the twentieth - century psychoanalyst , and his " man within the breast " sounds like an ... appears to us inaccessible to weakness and folly , " he is the ideal person to hear " the little story of our doubts and ...
... appear to prefigure the twentieth - century psychoanalyst , and his " man within the breast " sounds like an ... appears to us inaccessible to weakness and folly , " he is the ideal person to hear " the little story of our doubts and ...
Page 221
... appear from every definition that can possibly be given to be independent and individual . From the moment of my birth I have had a series of perceptions peculiarly my own , and which it is impossible should altogether coincide with ...
... appear from every definition that can possibly be given to be independent and individual . From the moment of my birth I have had a series of perceptions peculiarly my own , and which it is impossible should altogether coincide with ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 9 |
The Transparent Mind | 30 |
The Ruling Passions | 86 |
Copyright | |
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