Instinct, Knowledge and Occult Science on the Early Modern English Stage

Katherine Walker author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Publishing:31st Jul '26

£90.00

This title is due to be published on 31st July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Instinct, Knowledge and Occult Science on the Early Modern English Stage cover

In Instinct, Knowledge and Occult Science on the Early Modern English Stage, Katherine Walker focuses on embodied experiences in the theater and the debates within the sciences that eventually fell out of favor but interlaced “gut feelings” with observational practice. She examines understudied occult sciences, looking to genres such as almanacs, witchcraft pamphlets and demonologies. As Walker argues, the early modern discourse of instinct registers shifting appraisals of the body’s role in making new knowledge. Unlike reason, instinct allowed anyone—a witch, an animal or a queen—to interpret a complex, animate environment. This knowledge was not only a seductive idea, but also opened up a range of debates on the limits of human cognition, the rights of marginalised individuals to offer new understanding, and the contours of what we can know about the environment.

This deeply researched book explores how instinct provided vital embodied knowledge in early modernity. Reading a range of sources and centring the perspectives of marginalised figures, Walker recovers the epistemological force of nonrational, somatic experience. This important contribution to the history of knowledge reframes the ‘pricks’ of instinct as a rich method for understanding a complex world. -- Jenny C. Mann, New York University

ISBN: 9781399548120

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

244 pages