Abstract/Details

Everyday Alchemy

Maurer, Margaret C.   The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  2024. 31236201.

Abstract (summary)

"Everyday Alchemy" travels to kitchens and stillrooms, paper mills and printhouses, gardens and beehives to consider how men and women in early modern England used animal, domestic, and artisanal practices to engage in alchemical speculation and experimentation. Examining texts across genres and media, I demonstrate that textual use and production was central to this alchemical speculation and experimentation. Following Paracelsus's promotion of alchemical approaches to medicine, alchemical theories and practices proliferated in English manuscript and print. Vernacular print texts shared alchemical knowledge and advocated for the epistemic value of experience. Readers and compilers assessed, tested, revised, and distilled what they read, incorporating alchemical knowledge into early modern household science, especially household physic. The first two chapters, "Reading" and "Writing," trace alchemical knowledge across print and manuscript to show how different early modern people used and repurposed what they read. The third chapter and coda, "Paper" and "Ink," explore how even the material text was inflected with alchemical wonder. Ultimately, examining alchemical knowledge within a variety of textual genres and media illuminates that early modern alchemy was not exclusive to eccentrics or elites. Instead, alchemical texts could be popular, printed, and vernacular; alchemical practices could be domestic and routine; and alchemical practitioners were diverse in their beliefs, practices, and identities.

Indexing (details)


Subject
English literature;
Science history;
British & Irish literature;
European history
Classification
0593: British and Irish literature
0585: Science history
0335: European history
Identifier / keyword
Alchemy; Book history; History of alchemy; Materiality; Recipes
Title
Everyday Alchemy
Author
Maurer, Margaret C.
Number of pages
281
Publication year
2024
Degree date
2024
School code
0153
Source
DAI-A 85/11(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
ISBN
9798382630243
Advisor
Floyd-Wilson, Mary
Committee member
Barbour, Reid; Wolfe, Jessica; Legassie, Shayne; Leong, Elaine
University/institution
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Department
English and Comparative Literature
University location
United States -- North Carolina
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
31236201
ProQuest document ID
3056466386
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/3056466386/abstract/BE2AC324D0B54541PQ/50