Inventing the language to tell it : Robinson Jeffers and the biology of consciousness
著者
書誌事項
Inventing the language to tell it : Robinson Jeffers and the biology of consciousness
Fordham University Press, 2013
- : cloth
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [161]-168) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
From 1920 until his death in 1962, consciousness and its effect on the natural world was Robinson Jeffers's obsession. Understanding and explaining the biological basis of mind is one of the towering challenges of modern science to this day, and Jeffers's poetic experiment is an important contribution to American literary history-no other twentieth-century poet attempted such a thorough engagement with a crucial scientific problem. Jeffers invented a sacramental poetics that accommodates a modern scientific account of consciousness, thereby integrating an essentially religious sensibility with science in order to discover the sacramentality of natural process and reveal a divine cosmos.
There is no other study of Jeffers or sacramental nature poetry like this one. It proposes that Jeffers's sacramentalism emerged out of his scientifically informed understanding of material nature. Drawing on ecocriticism, religious studies, and neuroscience, Inventing the Language
to Tell It shows how Jeffers produced the most compelling sacramental nature poetry of the twentieth century.
目次
Acknowledgments Introduction: Robinson Jeffers's Sacramental Poetics 1 Rock, Bark, and Blood: Sacramental Poetics and West Coast Nature Poetry 2 The Strain in the Skull: Biopoetics and the Biology of Consciousness 3 The Whole Mind: Brains, Biology, and Bioregion in the Middle Period 4 To Keep One's Own Integrity: "The Inhumanist" and the Crisis of Holism 5 The Wound in the Brain: The Discoveries of the Later Poetry Conclusion: The Jeffers Influence and the Middle Generation Notes Bibliography Index
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