Writing the forest in early modern England : a sylvan pastoral nation
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Writing the forest in early modern England : a sylvan pastoral nation
(Medieval and Renaissance literary studies)
Duquesne University Press, c2009
Available at 2 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this work, Jeffrey S Theis focuses on pastoral literature in early modern England as an emerging form of nature writing. In particular, Theis analyzes what happens when pastoral writing is set in forests - what he terms 'sylvan pastoral'. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, forests and woodlands played an instrumental role in the formation of individual and national identities in England. Although environmentalism as we know it did not yet exist, persistent fears of timber shortages led to a larger anxiety about the status of forests. Perhaps more important, forests were dynamic and contested sites of largely undeveloped spaces where the poor would migrate in a time of rising population when land became scarce. And in addition to being a place where the poor would go, the forest also was a playground for monarchs and aristocrats where they indulged in the symbolically rich sport of hunting. Conventional pastoral literature, then, transforms when writers use it to represent and define forests and the multiple ways in which English society saw these places.
In exploring these themes, authors expose national concerns regarding deforestation and forest law and present views relating to land ownership, nationhood, and the individual's relationship to nature. Of particular interest are the ways in which cultures turn confusing spaces into known places and how this process is shaped by nature, history, gender, and class. Theis examines the playing out of these issues in familiar works by Shakespeare, such as "A Midsummer Night's Dream", "The Merry Wives of Windsor", and "As You Like It", Andrew Marvell's "Upon Appleton House", John Milton's "Mask and Paradise Lost", as well as in lesser-known prose works of the English revolution, such as James Howell's "Dendrologia" and John Evelyn's "Sylva". As a unique eco-critical study of forests in early modern English literature, this book makes an important contribution to the growing field of the history of environmentalism, and will be of interest to those working in literary and cultural history as well as philosophers concerned with nature and space theory.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: Sylvan Pastoral in Early Modern England
- The Rise of Sylvan Pastoral: Literary Form Meets Forest History
- Shakespeare's Green Plot: The Stage as Forest & the Forest as Stage in As You Like It
- Green Plots & Green Plotters: A Midsummer Night's Dream & Sylvan Struggle
- A Border Skirmish: Community, Deer Poaching, & Spatial Transgression in The Merry Wives of Windsor
- Sylvan Pastoral & the Civil War: Representing National Trauma in Sylvan Terms
- Royalist Woods
- John Milton's Sylvan Pastorals & the Theatrical & Godly Individual
- Bibliography
- Index.
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