New World Poetics: Nature and the Adamic Imagination of Whitman, Neruda, and WalcottUniversity of Georgia Press, 25 янв. 2010 г. - Всего страниц: 442 A simultaneously ecocritical and comparative study, New World Poetics plumbs the earthly depth and social breadth of the poetry of Walt Whitman, Pablo Neruda, and Derek Walcott, three of the Americas' most ambitious and epic-minded poets. In Whitman's call for a poetry of New World possibility, Neruda's invocation of an "American love," and Walcott's investment in the poetic ironies of an American epic, the adamic imagination of their poetry does not reinvent the mythical Garden that stands before history's beginnings but instead taps the foundational powers of language before a natural world deeply imbued with the traces of human time. Theirs is a postlapsarian Adam seeking a renewed sense of place in a biocentric and cross-cultural New World through language and nature's capacity for regeneration in the wake of human violence and suffering. The book introduces the environmental history of the Americas and its relationship to the foundation of American and Latin American studies, explores its relevance to each poet's ambition to recuperate the New World's lost histories, and provides a transnational poetics of understanding literary influence and textual simultaneity in the Americas. The study provides much needed in-depth ecocritical readings of the major poems of the three poets, insisting on the need for thoughtful regard for the challenge to human imagination and culture posed by nature's regenerative powers; nuanced appreciation for the difficulty of balancing the demands of social justice within the context of deep time; and the symptomatic dangers as well as healing potential of human self-consciousness in light of global environmental degradation. |
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... facts of history and ignores nature's promise of renewal, the past becomes an inevitable prophecy of perpetual New World victimization, both human and natural. What is particularly striking about Walcott's argument is how nature's cause ...
... fact, self-consciously portrays this very destabilization in the breakdown of his sexualized metaphor of Helen as St. Lucia.2 Elizabeth Bishop's own version of the Crusoe figure in “Crusoe in England,” a figure also important to Walcott ...
... surely as significant a historical fact as any military struggle or colonial violence. Widespread biotic colonialisms throughout the Americas inspired 22 | Chapter One historian Alfred Crosby to call the Old World pioneer “a.
... fact that biotic knowledge helped to nurture the growing awareness of national consciousness and yearnings for political autonomy, the environmental history of the Americas clearly demonstrates that the environmental histories within ...
... fact that their language, no matter how well constructed, will inevitably fail to subsume the temporally and spatially dynamic natural world around them. This elusiveness of natures helps to liberate language, despite its penchant for ...
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