Georgic Modernity and British Romanticism: Poetry and the Mediation of HistoryGoodman traces connections between Georgic verse and developments in other spheres from the late seventeenth to the early nineteenth centuries. |
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很奇怪啊,这本不是刚加上去么?还说要看第一章讲到的history of mediation部分。
Contents
Georgic modernity sensory media and the affect of history | 1 |
The Georgics and the cultivation of mediums 16601712 sensible paths and pleasurable Byways | 17 |
magnifying small things after the restoration | 22 |
the polite pleasures of information | 29 |
beyond the principle of pleasure | 35 |
The microscopic eye and the noise of history in Thomsons The Seasons | 38 |
trouble in the presence room of the mind | 42 |
reprise | 54 |
waiting for strangers | 88 |
Cowper and Walter Benjamin | 98 |
between acedia and aisthesis | 101 |
Passages of Life aural histories in The Excursion | 106 |
The husbandry of the past and the passions in the Georgics | 112 |
the open heart | 115 |
anecdotal historiography and the acoustical unconscious | 127 |
floral histories and registers of muteness | 140 |
The Seasons | 56 |
Cowpers georgic of the news the loophole in the retreat | 67 |
The news and the not yet history | 72 |
articulating the news | 78 |
Notes | 144 |
199 | |
218 | |
Other editions - View all
Georgic Modernity and British Romanticism: Poetry and the Mediation of History Kevis Goodman No preview available - 2008 |
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Addison affective anecdote argues attempt becomes called Cambridge century chapter Chicago communication concern context conversation Cowper critical culture dead discussion earlier early eighteenth eighteenth-century English Essay example Excursion experience feeling figure georgic give human idea Imagination interest John kind knowledge labor landscape language later least less Letters lines literary lived Locke London Marxism means medium microscopic microscopic eye mind mode narrative nature newspaper noise noted object observed offers Oxford particular passage past perception phrase pleasure Pleasure Principle poem poet poetic poetry Politics practice present principle problem production prose provides question readers reading relation rhetoric Romantic Romanticism Seasons seems sense sight social sound Spectator suggests Task things Thomson's thought turn understanding University Press verse Virgil's Wordsworth writing York