'Long grief, dark melancholy, hopeless natural love': Clarissa, Cheyne and narratives of body and soul
- PMID: 16878740
'Long grief, dark melancholy, hopeless natural love': Clarissa, Cheyne and narratives of body and soul
Abstract
The paper deals with Clarissa's wasting combination of love and religious melancholy, and the way in which ailments of the mind have an immediate effect on the body in this period. George Cheyne's theories of melancholy and hypochondria explain at least some of the mechanisms by which the eighteenth century understood this phenomenon. 'Clarissa' is an important text because it influenced so many later representations of melancholy, especially as it is gendered feminine in Richardson's newly feminised discourse of sensibility.
Similar articles
-
Johnson and Boswell: "vile melancholy" and "the hypochondriack".Bull N Y Acad Med. 1985 Sep;61(7):657-78. Bull N Y Acad Med. 1985. PMID: 3899234 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
-
Love, madness and social order: love melancholy in France and England in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.Gesnerus. 2006;63(1-2):33-45. Gesnerus. 2006. PMID: 16878735
-
Death in life and life in death: melancholy and the enlightenment.Gesnerus. 2006;63(1-2):90-102. Gesnerus. 2006. PMID: 16878739
-
[DAUGHTERS OF SUN. MANIA, MELANCHOLY AND LOVE SICKNESS IN ANCIENT MYTH AND SCIENTIFIC SOURCES].Med Secoli. 2014;26(3):679-703. Med Secoli. 2014. PMID: 26292514 Review. Italian.
-
Discipline and passion: meaning, masochism and mythology in popular medical romances.Nurs Inq. 1995 Dec;2(4):203-10. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1800.1995.tb00147.x. Nurs Inq. 1995. PMID: 8705604 Review.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Personal name as subject
- Actions
- Actions