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The shore defies definition. The shore deconstructs and rebuilds, is the beginning or end of a journey, initiates or stops mobility. Here survivors of shipwrecks, like Robinson Crusoe, escape their death; and the weary and tired, like Max Morden, wade back into the womb of nature. The shore is transformation spatialized. Still the coast as literary setting is more than a decorative space. Its utopian/dystopian nature, its liminality and ambiguity invite transgressions of various kinds, which undermine any notion of stable and fixed borders and boundaries. The littoral is liminal, a third space that contests and deconstructs epistemic certainties. This study illustrates this paradigmatic nature of shorelines from William Shakespeare’s The Tempest to John Banville’s The Sea .
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Our current ecological crises compel us not only to understand how contemporary media shapes our conceptions of human relationships with the environment, but also to examine the historical genealogies of such perspectives. Written during the onset of the Little Ice Age in Britain, Middle English romances provide a fascinating window into the worldviews of popular vernacular literature (and its audiences) at the close of the Middle Ages. Andrew M. Richmond shows how literary conventions of romances shaped and were in turn influenced by contemporary perspectives on the natural world. These popular texts also reveal widespread concern regarding the damaging effects of human actions and climate change. The natural world was a constant presence in the writing, thoughts, and lives of the audiences and authors of medieval English romance - and these close readings reveal that our environmental concerns go back further in our history and culture than we think.
Romances, English --- Seashore in literature. --- Landscapes in literature. --- English literature --- History and criticism. --- Landscape in literature
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At the beach, bodies converge with the elements and strange treasures come to light. Departing from the conventional association of modernism with the city, this book makes a case for the coastal zone as a surprisingly generative setting for twentieth-century literature and art. An unruly and elusive confluence of human and more-than-human forces, the seashore is also a space of performance--a stage for loosely scripted, improvisatory forms of embodiment and togetherness. The beach, Hannah Freed-Thall argues, was to the modernist imagination what mountains were to Romanticism: a space not merely of anthropogenic conquest but of vital elemental and creaturely connection. With an eye to the peripheries of capitalist leisure, Freed-Thall recasts familiar seaside practices--including tide-pooling, beachcombing, gambling, and sunbathing--as radical experiments in perception and sociability. Close readings of works by Marcel Proust, Virginia Woolf, Claude McKay, Samuel Beckett, Rachel Carson, and Gordon Matta-Clark, among others, explore the modernist beach as a queer refuge, a precarious commons, a scene of collective exhaustion and endurance, and a visionary threshold at the end of the world. Interweaving environmental humanities, queer and feminist theory, and cultural history, Modernism at the Beach offers new ways of understanding twentieth-century literature and its relation to ecological thought.
Beaches in literature. --- Seashore in literature. --- Modernism (Literature) --- Queer theory. --- Ecocriticism. --- Literature, Modern --- History and criticism.
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"The beach is modernity's dreamscape. Emerging as a privileged site of leisure in the era of industrial capitalism, the seashore is often imagined as a paradisaical zone of exception-a space of sensory intensity, relaxation, and democratic possibility. As a stage for queer and non-hegemonic forms of desire, perception, and sociability, and as an ecological site of exceptional dynamism, the beach is a crucial but neglected setting for twentieth-century literature and art. In The Beach Effect, Hannah Freed-Thall reads various works with a coastally attuned eye drawing on both formal and eco-critical approaches. She argues that the beach is crucial to modernism and twentieth-century literature as a reflection of impermanence that is inhospitable to plot and narrative and instead functions as a stage for new encounters between language and sensation in which style comes into view. In separate chapters, Freed-Thall considers how the seashore becomes a laboratory for queer desire and of modernist aesthetic form in Proust's In Search of Lost Time; a refuge for domesticity in the work of Woolf and others; a space for misfit intimacies in Rachel Carson's The Edge of the Sea; and a place of sexual encounter in Claude McKay's Banjo and the works of 70s NYC artists. The concluding chapter looks at contemporary site-specific art works that examines the beach as a site of environmental devastation"--
Beaches in literature --- Seashore in literature --- Literature, Modern --- Modernism (Literature) --- Queer theory --- Ecocriticism --- History and criticism
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"In Sir Isumbras, one of the most enduringly popular late medieval romances, the penitential experience of its eponymous hero (modeled off of the evergreen St. Eustace tales) is grounded in a careful exploration of hillside ironmines and the communities of smiths that rely upon them. Such an interest in natural resource management and industrial development derives from the notable focus on charting topography that distinguishes the central third of the romance - marking Isumbras's transition from secular to divine systems of values, and his geographical movement from Christian to Saracen lands. Similarly, in the fourteenth-century Middle English version of William of Palerne (hereafter William), the eponymous protagonist flees with his lover, Melior, through a world of forests and bays that overflows with topographical details. I will also consider how sympathetic portrayals of laborers and other low-class harvesters of natural resources suggest that romances, particularly around the turn of the fifteenth century, reflect the shifting nature of their bourgeois-gentry audience by engaging with the environmental experiences of merchants, household clerks, reeves, franklins, and gentry farmers in addition to those of the higher aristocracy"-- These intricate explanations of quarry pits, hollow oaks, roadside groves, seaside caves, and war-torn estates together compose a perspective on landscape defined by networks of economic exchange. In this regard, the predominant view of the natural world presented in William ties it to earlier romances such as Havelok the Dane, a text interested in the systems of exchange that knit seaside fishermen to urban markets; and to later texts such as the Middle English versions of Partonope of Blois, which demonstrates in its depictions of estates the mercantile and agricultural uses of natural spaces that underlie the successful maintenance of a noble identity. This chapter, then, will discuss how Middle English romances' attention to the management and harvest of natural resources often reveals the link between country and urban spaces created by the exchange of such goods.
English literature --- Landscapes in literature. --- Romances, English --- Romances, English. --- Seashore in literature. --- History and criticism --- Middle English. --- History and criticism. --- 1100-1500.
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Seashore --- Seashore in art. --- Seashore in literature. --- Rivage --- Rivage dans l'art --- Rivage dans la littérature --- Rivage dans la littérature --- cultuurfilosofie --- kust --- zee --- strand --- cultuurgeschiedenis --- 130.2 --- Ports, histoire --- stations balnéaires --- Tourisme --- Romanticism. --- Romantisme --- Psychological aspects. --- Aspect psychologique --- Europe --- Intellectual life --- Vie intellectuelle --- VOYAGES EN MER --- IMAGINAIRE --- MER --- STATIONS BALNEAIRES --- LITTORAL --- DANS LA LITTERATURE --- HISTOIRE --- ASPECT PSYCHOLOGIQUE --- 18E SIECLE --- 19E SIECLE --- SOURCES --- DANS L'ART
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Oceaan en beschaving --- Ocean and civilization --- Ocean et civilisation --- Romanticism --- Seashore --- Seashore in art --- Seashore in literature --- Romantisme --- Rivage --- Rivage dans l'art --- Rivage dans la littérature --- Psychological aspects --- Aspect psychologique --- Europe --- Intellectual life --- Vie intellectuelle --- Ocean --- Sea in literature. --- Port --- Sociologie de l'art --- Sociologie des loisirs --- Social aspects --- History --- Geografie --- Landschapskunde --- Algemeen. --- Civilization --- Rivage dans la littérature --- Ocean - Social aspects - Europe - History - 18th century. --- Ocean - Social aspects - Europe - History - 19th century. --- Seashore - Europe - History - 18th century. --- Seashore - Europe - History - 19th century.
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