Fictive Domains: Body, Landscape, and Nostalgia, 1717-1770Bucknell University Press, 2007 - 191 pàgines The focus of this book is the period 1717-1770, during which nostalgia was just beginning to emerge as a cultural concept. Utilizing psychoanalysis, feminist, and materialist theories, this book examines representations of bodies and landscapes in the cultural production of the early- to mid-eighteenth century. With considerable social anxiety surrounding changes in the structure of the family, the control of bodies within the family, and ownership and access to the land, nostalgia generated narratives that became the richly textured novels and long poems of the eighteenth century. In Samuel Richardson's Clarissa, or the History of a Young Lady (1747-48), social anxieties are played out on the body of Clarissa Harlowe; female passion is controlled in Pope's Eloisa to Abelard (1717), and Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Julie, ou la Nouvelle Heloise (1761); |
Continguts
13 | |
Pronouncing her case to be grief Nostalgia and the Body in Clarissa and Sir Charles Granduon | 33 |
Desire Body and Landscape in Popes Eloisa to Abelard and Rousseaus Julie | 67 |
The Secret Pleasure of the Picturesque | 103 |
In a world so changed Feminine Nostalgia and Sarah Scotts A Description of Millenium Hall and the Country Adjacent | 136 |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Fictive Domains: Body, Landscape, and Nostalgia, 1717-1770 Judith Broome Visualització de fragments - 2007 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
aesthetic Alexander Pope attempt Belford bodies and landscapes castration century cited in text Clarissa Harlowe Clarissa's body Clementina construction contradictions cultural nostalgia death Deserted Village desire despite disease domestic economic eighteenth Eighteenth-Century Eloisa to Abelard father female body feminine nostalgia Fiction fictive domains garden gender Goldsmith's grief Harriet Héloïse Héloïse's Hereafter cited ideology illness Julie's body Lady land letter Literature loss Lovelace Lovelace's lover male marriage masculine melancholia melancholy Millenium Hall mother narrative narrator natural nevertheless nostalgia nostalgic notes novel observes Oliver Goldsmith Olivia passion pastoral patriarchal picturesque pleasure poem political Pope's Eloisa Primrose rape represented role Rousseau's Rousseau's Julie Saint-Preux Samuel Richardson Sarah Scott's sensibility sentimental body sentimental novel sexual sick role Sinclair's Sir Charles Grandison Sir Charles's social change space story subjectivity suffering symbolic textual tion tradition University Press Vicar of Wakefield virtue Windsor Forest women writing York