Bültmann & Gerriets
Wild Romanticism
von Cassandra Falke, Markus Poetzsch
Verlag: Routledge
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-0-367-75351-1
Erschienen am 09.01.2023
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 234 mm [H] x 156 mm [B] x 12 mm [T]
Gewicht: 354 Gramm
Umfang: 228 Seiten

Preis: 61,40 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Wild Romanticism consolidates contemporary thinking about conceptions of the wild in British and European Romanticism, clarifying the emergence of wilderness as a cultural, symbolic and ecological idea.



Markus Poetzsch is Associate Professor of English at Wilfrid Laurier University, where he specializes in British Romantic literature and ecocriticism. He is the author of Visionary Dreariness: Readings in Romanticism's Quotidian Sublime and has published essays on John Clare, William and Dorothy Wordsworth, Thomas De Quincey, Leigh Hunt, and Henry David Thoreau. His research considers intersecting themes, such as aesthetics and landscape gardening, pedestrianism and loco-description, anthropocentrism and ornithology, poetics, and ethics.

Cassandra Falke is Professor of English Literature at UiT - The Arctic University of Norway. Her books include Phenomenology and the Broken Body (co-ed. 2019), The Phenomenology of Love and Reading (2016), Literature by the Working Class: English Autobiography, 1820-1848 (2013), and Intersections in Christianity and Critical Theory (ed. 2010). She has published essays on romanticism, phenomenology, education, and the role of the reader. Her current project discusses acts of reading in light of recent theorizations of complicity.



Introduction

Cassandra Falke and Markus Poetzsch

  1. Weakness and wildness in Wordsworth's "The Brothers"
  2. Emma Mason

  3. Wild freedom and careful wandering in the poetry of William Wordsworth and John Clare
  4. Sue Edney

  5. Plumbing the depths of wildness: from the picturesque to John Clare
  6. Markus Poetzsch

  7. Savage, holy, enchanted: Coleridge in concert with the wild
  8. Gregory Leadbetter

  9. Human grapes in the wine-presses: vegetable life and the violence of cultivation in Blake's Milton
  10. Tristanne Connolly

  11. Wild plants and wild passions in Percy Bysshe Shelley's poems for Jane Williams
  12. Cian Duffy

  13. Wilding Europe and Childe Harold¿s Pilgrimage
  14. Cassandra Falke

  15. Hölderlin, Heidegger, and hyperobjects
  16. William Davis

  17. "Almost Wild": Jane Austen's dirtiest of heroines
  18. Colin Carman

  19. "Wild above rule or art": volcanic luxuriance, subterranean terror, and the nature of gender in Ann Radcliffe's A Sicilian Romance
  20. James Lesslie

  21. "A strange unearthly climate": James Hogg's tale of the Arctic wild
  22. Robert W. Rix

  23. "Vast and irregular plains of ice": wilderness as smooth space in Frankenstein

Mirka Horová

Index


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