Shelley and the Revolution in taste : the body and the natural world

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Shelley and the Revolution in taste : the body and the natural world

Timothy Morton

(Cambridge studies in romanticism, 10)

Cambridge University Press, 1994

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注記

Bibliography: p. 275-292

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book brings together the themes of diet, consumption, the body, and human relationships with the natural world, in a highly original study of Shelley. A campaigning vegetarian and proto-ecological thinker, Shelley may seem to us curiously modern, but Morton offers an illuminatingly broad context for Shelley's views in eighteenth-century social and political thought concerning the relationships between humanity and nature. The book is at once grounded in the revolutionary history of the period 1790-1820, and informed by current theoretical issues and anthropological and sociological approaches to literature. Morton provides challenging new readings of much-debated poems, plays, and novels by both Percy and Mary Shelley, as well as the first sustained interpretation of Shelley's prose on diet. With its stimulating literary-historical reassessment of questions about nature and culture, this study will provoke fresh discussion about Shelley, Romanticism, and modernity.

目次

  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction: prescriptions
  • 1. The rights of brutes
  • 2. The purer nutriment: diet and Shelley's biographies
  • 3. In the face: the poetics of the natural diet
  • 4. Apollo in the jungle: healthy morals and the body beautiful
  • 5. Intemperate figures: refining culture
  • 6. Sustaining natures: Shelley and ecocriticism
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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