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dc.contributor.authorRaman, Shankar
dc.date.accessioned2017-12-18T20:17:10Z
dc.date.available2017-12-18T20:17:10Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.isbn9781474277143
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/112790
dc.description.abstracthe need to conjoin singularity and exemplarity drives a range of Shakespeare’s procreation sonnets in the young man sub-sequence. Standing for “a singularly perfect nature” as well as for “the yet more total perfection of the Nature of nature,” as Joel Fineman putsit, the young man “represents not only the particular token and general type of ideality, but, also . . . the harmoniously organic way these are related to one another.” Often, these sonnets achieve their end by projecting the relationship between ideal and actual onto biology; they conflate the metaphysical “pattern” – to borrow a word from Sonnets 19 and 98 – embodied by the young man with the reproductive generation, potentially ad infinitum, of his likenesses. This underlying logic derives, as Fineman further notes in passing, from an engagement, more or less explicit, with an inherited mathematical tradition: Only if we grant the unitary arithmetic of idealism does it make sense that the young man, multiplying himself after his own kind, will father the “many” that will prove him “One.” And only if we accept the tidy categoriality of genus and species will we understand how the young man spawns a series of particulars whose lineal succession embodies the young man’s universality: “Proving his beauty by succession thine.” (251) Fineman’s evidentiary instance comes from Sonnet 2, where the notion of “succession” brings together the biological iteration of sameness with the sequential unfolding of cardinal numbers, “proving” the currency of this “unitary arithmetic” by opening a passage between the idea of a (real) biological series (“like father, like son”) and the series of whole numbers, based on the repeated addition of the idealised unit or the one.en_US
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherBloomsbury Publishingen_US
dc.relation.isversionofhttps://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/the-sonnets-the-state-of-play-9781474277143/en_US
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alikeen_US
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/en_US
dc.sourceRamanen_US
dc.title'Thou single wilt prove none': Counting, Succession and Identity in Shakespeare's Sonnetsen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
dc.identifier.citationRaman, Shankar. "'Thou single wilt prove none': Counting, Succession and Identity in Shakespeare's Sonnets." The Sonnets: The State of Play, ed. Elizabeth Baumann and Hannah Crawforth, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017 © 2017 Bloomsbury Publishingen_US
dc.contributor.departmentMassachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Humanities. Literature Sectionen_US
dc.contributor.approverRaman, Shankaren_US
dc.contributor.mitauthorRaman, Shankar
dc.relation.journalThe Sonnets: The State of Playen_US
dc.eprint.versionAuthor's final manuscripten_US
dc.type.urihttp://purl.org/eprint/type/BookItemen_US
eprint.statushttp://purl.org/eprint/status/NonPeerRevieweden_US
dspace.orderedauthorsRaman, Shankaren_US
dspace.embargo.termsNen_US
dc.identifier.orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9288-2818
mit.licenseOPEN_ACCESS_POLICYen_US


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