Green and Pleasant Land: English Culture and the Romantic CountrysideAmanda Gilroy Peeters Publishers, 2004 - 201 oldal The present volume, number VIII in the series Groningen Studies in Cultural Change, offers a selection of papers presented at a workshop organised by Amanda Gilroy and Wil Verhoeven entitled Green and Pleasant Land: English Culture and the Romantic Countryside. The contributions in this volume illuminate the ideological investments of particular ways of experiencing the English countryside of the Romantic era. While their analyses of cultural change are historically specific, they explore, too, the conflicted present-day legacies of romantic landscapes. |
Tartalomjegyzék
The Contradictory Legacy of | 1 |
S T Coleridges | 19 |
Green Unpleasant Land | 31 |
The Habit and the Horse or the Suburbanisation | 45 |
Blakes England and the Restoration of Jerusalem | 57 |
John Clares I and Eye Egotism and Ecologism | 73 |
As the clergy are or are not what they ought to | 89 |
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acres Adlestrop aesthetic agricultural Albion Anglican Ann Radcliffe argues beautiful become Berkeley Hall Blake Blake's Britain British Broad Crag Byron century Clare Coleridge Constable Constable's contemporary critics cultural ecological egotism eighteenth Emigrants enclosed enclosure England England's green English countryside English landscape equestrian essay farms feet in ancient Foot and Mouth France French garden genres Gilpin green & pleasant green and pleasant Hay Wain Hazlitt horse human Humphry Repton Ibidem idea ideological imagination Jane Austen Jerusalem John John Clare John Constable Juan Kant Knight lady Lake District letter living Mansfield Park Milton moral nature Northanger Abbey novel parish pastoral picturesque theory pleasant land poem poet poetic poetry political Radcliffe Radcliffe's Revolution riding Robert Miles Romantic Romanticism Ruined Cottage rural scene sense social Sourby Sourby's Stendhal Steventon sublime thing Thomas Leigh tion tourists Unitarian William women Wordsworth writing