
The Risks of Simile in Renaissance Rhetoric
Shirley Sharon-Zisser(Author)
Peter Lang Verlag
Will be published approx. on 21. September 2000
Book
Hardback
XI, 378 pages
978-0-8204-4581-6 (ISBN)
Description
The Risks of Simile in Renaissance Rhetoric is a groundbreaking study of the fascination with simile in Renaissance rhetoric and poetics. Moving Renaissance studies beyond the limitations of new historicism, Shirley Sharon-Zisser demonstrates that Renaissance rhetoricians anticipated the interest of psychoanalysis in the links between desire and language. The book traces the erotics of simile and of the related rhetorical categories of figure, trope, metaphor, and the primal substance of signification in Renaissance rhetoric books. Sharon-Zisser shows Renaissance rhetoricians associate simile with archaic maternality, with pastoral, with the omphalic, with multiple forms of sexuality, and with the jouissance of asymmetrical approximation. The psychoanalysis of Renaissance aesthetics of simile shows the structure of desire is not, as Lacan would have it, metonymic. Desire has the structure of the similaic.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 23 cm
Width: 16 cm
Weight
670 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8204-4581-6 (9780820445816)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
The Author: Shirley Sharon-Zisser is Lecturer in English at Tel Aviv University, and has been a Visiting Fulbright Scholar at Cornell University. She has been guest editor of special journal issues on the erotics of rhetoric in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. She is the author of numerous articles on medieval and Renaissance literature, on psychoanalytical theory, and on rhetorical theory from a philosophical and psychoanalytical perspective. She is editing the first collection of essays to be published on Shakespeare's 'A Lover's Complaint'.