In Conversation with Annalise Volpone – Recording

Camille Adnot examines the ways in which Blake's use of mirror writing and mirror design suberts our experience of reading his illuminated books.

Global Blake: In Conversation with Annalise Volpone - Imagination and the pregnant mind in Blake’s cosmogony

In his early prophetic works, Blake presents his own creation myth, which reinterprets Genesis and critically examines contemporary medical discourse on generation and birth. In this conversation, I would like to explore a specific trope that emerges from Blake’s depiction of imagination and (artistic) creation: partus mentis, the parturition of the mind. This concept serves both as a metaphor for describing imagination and creativity, and as the process through which the Human Form Divine is revealed. Partus mentisÂoriginates from classical tradition, including mythology and Plato’s philosophy. Traces of this tradition appear in Blake’s own reworking of the metaphor, where he also responds to medical theories and practices regarding generation and life. Through partus mentis, Blake reinforces the analogy between the womb and the brain, which was commonly employed in the medical and literary fields in the long eighteenth century. Finally, Blake’s account of the formation of the human body, which is inseparable from human imagination, poses an ontological challenge. Blake’s embodied imagination blurs the boundaries between the inside and the outside, making them increasingly permeable and indistinct.

Annalise Volpone
Annalisa Volpone is an Associate Professor of English Literature at the University of Perugia. She specializes on modernism and romanticism; her research includes the intersections between literature and medicine in the Romantic period. She is currently working on a monograph on birth metaphors and imagination in William Blake.