(Pre-)Romantic Constructions of Nature (CROSBI ID 56825)
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Podaci o odgovornosti
Domines Veliki, Martina
engleski
(Pre-)Romantic Constructions of Nature
This paper was fostered by my reading of Stipe Grgas’s book chapter “The Use of Nature: An 18th Century Case Study” in The Constructions of Nature (1994). In this book chapter Grgas claims that “nature” acts as a kind of empty signifier, a mere “prop within a context of argumentation” (202).This paper aims to explore the ways in which “nature” could act as a construct in romanticism taking into account Raymond Williams’s contention that “nature” is “perhaps the most complex word in the language” (221). Two authors are taken as representatives of a supposedly new ways of perceiving nature in the romantic age: Rousseau, as a pre- romantic writer, important for the ideas of “inner nature” and “the state of nature, ” both closely connected to the idea of “a natural man” and Wordsworth, who aligns himself with Rousseau when pointing out in the famous 2nd Preface to Lyrical Ballads that “Poetry is the image of Man and Nature” (Stillinger 454), thus putting man and nature on an equal footing and advocating a kind of psycho-natural parallelism that would be one of the romantic topoi in his best poetry.
nature ; the self ; politics ; money ; Wordsworth ; Rousseau
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Podaci o prilogu
283-301.
objavljeno
Podaci o knjizi
The Errant Labour of the Humanities: Festschrift Presented to Stipe Grgas
Cvek, Sven ; Borislav Knežević, Jelena Šesnić
Zagreb: FF Press
2017.
0-554-23333-8