What if historical fiction were understood as a disfiguring of calculus? Or poems enacting the formation and breakdown of community as expositions of irrational numbers? What if, in other words, literary texts possessed a kind of mathematical unconscious?
The persistence of the rhetoric of ‘two cultures, ‘ one scientific, the other humanities-based, obscures the porous border and productive relationship that has long existed between literature and mathematics. In eighteenth-century Scottish universities, geometry in particular was considered one of the humanities; anchored in philosophy, it inculcated what we call critical thinking. But challenges to classical geometry within the realm of mathematics obligated Scottish geometers to become more creative in their defense of the traditional discipline; and when literary writers and philosophers incorporated these mathematical problems into their own work, the results were not only ingenious but in some cases pioneering.
Literature After Euclid tells the story of the creative adaptation of geometry in Scotland during and after the long eighteenth century. It argues that diverse attempts in literature and philosophy to explain or even emulate the geometric achievements of Isaac Newton and others resulted in innovations that modify our understanding of descriptive and bardic poetry, the aesthetics of the picturesque, and the historical novel. Matthew Wickman’s analyses of these innovations in the work of Walter Scott, Robert Burns, James Thomson, David Hume, Thomas Reid, and other literati change how we perceive the Scottish Enlightenment and the later, modernist ethos that purportedly relegated the ‘classical’ Enlightenment to the dustbin of history. Indeed, the Scottish Enlightenment’s geometric imagination changes how we see literary history itself.
قائمة المحتويات
Introduction
PART I. THEOREM: SHAPES OF TIME
Chapter 1. Scotland’s Age of Union: Toward an Elongated Eighteenth Century
Chapter 2. Scott’s Shapes
PART II. SCHOLIUM: SCENES OF WRITING
Chapter 3. ‘Wild Geometry’ and the Picturesque
Chapter 4. Burns After Reading, or On the Poetic Fold Between Shape and Number
PART III. LOCUS: MEASURING THE SCOTTISH ENLIGHTENMENT ACROSS HISTORY
Chapter 5. The Newtonian Turn/Turning from Newton: James Thomson’s Poetic Calculus
Chapter 6. A Long and Shapely Eighteenth Century
Notes
Bibliography
Index
عن المؤلف
Matthew Wickman is Associate Professor of English at Brigham Young University and Founding Director of the BYU Humanities Center. He is author of The Ruins of Experience: Scotland’s ‘Romantick’ Highlands and the Birth of the Modern Witness, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.