Reviews<i>'Nature and the New Science in England</i> is a work of consummate and sophisticated scholarship, well attuned to contemporary debates, intellectually rigorous, and beautifully written. It should receive the close attention of anyone interested in attitudes towards nature in the long eighteenth century.'<br /><i>Review of English Studies</i>

When scholars of cultural studies consider representations of the land by British writers, the Romantic poets continue to dominate the enquiry, as though the period right before the intensification of the Industrial Revolution offers readers one last glimpse of untarnished nature. Denys Van Renen instead examines the British authors writing in the decades following the Restoration of Charles II, writers whose literary works re-animate and re-embody the land as a site of dynamic interactions, and, through this, reveal how various cultural systems and ecologies shape notions of self and national identity.Van Renen presents a rich and varied cultural history of ecological exchange—a history that begins in the 1660s, with Milton and Marvell’s rejection of established Renaissance constructs, and ends with Defoe’s Farther Adventures, in which the noise of the persistent howls of animals pierces human representational systems, arguing that British literature from 1665-1726 represents a cognitive symbiosis between human and non-human.As humans attempt to reduce the adverse effect of the Anthropocene, the author ultimately proposes that the aesthetics of British writers from the Restoration and early eighteenth century might be mobilized in order to rebind humans to their environs.
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Introduction1. ‘Think there’: nature and cognition in Restoration Englandi. Miltonic environmentsii. Re-cognition in a postlapsarian worldiii. Stimulated by nature: reembodying Englandiv. Natures after the Renaissance2. Royalism, the new science and Native representational systems in Americai. Reclaiming the nation in The Indian queen and in The Indian emperourii. Salvaging Native epistemologiesiii. The ‘noble earth’iv. Coda3. Fantasies of ‘natural’ imperialism in the Far Easti. Pivoting from America to Asian cultures and environmentsii. Indamora and the Eastern improvisatoriii. Coda4. Artifice and adaptability on the borders of ‘Europe’i. The European semiotics of fashionii. Erasing borders and reestablishing cross-cultural ties in the Ottoman Empireiii. The limits of women’s intimacy5. Reconfiguring the borders of the humani. The howling within / hollowing out of Western ideologiesii. Abandonment: reembodying the animalCoda: Scottish Enlightenment and the invention of naturei. Exploring the Arctic: the last refuge of natureii. Scotland as ‘another form’?Bibliographyi. Primary worksii. Secondary worksiii. Other useful worksIndex
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781786941374
Publisert
2018-08-10
Utgiver
Vendor
Voltaire Foundation
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Denys Van Renen is Associate Professor of English at the University of Nebraska at Kearney. He is the author of 'The Other Exchange: Women, Servants, and the Urban Underclass in Early Modern England' and co-editor of 'Beyond 1776'. He has a critical edition of Dorothy Wordsworth's journals forthcoming.