Mélancolie, enthousiasme et folie : pathologie et inspiration dans la littérature dissidente

This article examines one of the best-known texts of the English Restoration, John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress (1678) in the light of contemporary medical attacks against religious dissenters. After a brief survey of the so-called « medical revolution » of the seventeenth-century and its consequ...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEtudes epistémè Vol. 7; no. 7
Main Author Dunan, Anne
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Institut du Monde Anglophone 01.05.2005
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Summary:This article examines one of the best-known texts of the English Restoration, John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress (1678) in the light of contemporary medical attacks against religious dissenters. After a brief survey of the so-called « medical revolution » of the seventeenth-century and its consequences in religion, we argue that the composition (and reception) of Bunyan’s text must be analysed in the light of those changes in medical discourse. Although Bunyan was necessarily aware that dreams and allegories were considered to be the productions of diseased minds, his choice of these modes of expression creates a tension, from the very beginning of the allegory, between natural and supernatural explanations of authorial inspiration.
ISSN:1634-0450
1634-0450
DOI:10.4000/episteme.2846