Title

Embodied Thought and the Perception of Place in King Lear

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-2015

Published In

Studies in English literature, 1500-1900

Volume

55

Issue

2

Pages

263-284

DOI

10.1353/sel.2015.0013

Abstract

When Lear asks the blinded Gloucester if he can “see how this world goes,” there is a peculiar and haunting quality to Gloucester’s response: “I see it feelingly.” Through Gloucester’s claim to a touching-sight, Shakespeare’s King Lear invokes what might be called the protophenomenology of the early modern period, an alternative ontology wherein bodies, objects, and spaces are shaped through multiple, overlapping senses. Blending historical phenomenology with the emergent theory of cognitive ecology, I argue that Gloucester’s claim directs us toward a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between environment and embodiment in King Lear.

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