ecocriticism & some romantic poems does nature exist beyond human languages?

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Ecocriticism & Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages? beyond Human Languages?

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Page 1: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism & Ecocriticism & Some Romantic PoemsSome Romantic Poems

Does Nature Exist Does Nature Exist

beyond Human Languages?beyond Human Languages?

Page 2: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

OutlineOutline

• Different Usages of Nature• Ecocriticism: Starting Questions• Ecocriticism:

– General Introduction; Methodologies; Issues;

• Examples: – the picturesque and “Tinturn Abbey”

– “Immortality Ode”: Nature & Childhood Romanticized?

– “To Autumn”: Weather and Time

• References

Page 3: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Different Usages of NatureDifferent Usages of Nature• Commodification:

– “ 我愛大自然“ commercial; uses of signs of nature (e.g. picaresque landscape) in tea commercials and tourism promotion; Hinet “net the world” (with colorful animals in cage); “Fifteen-Dollar Eagle”

• Symbolic/narrative Treatments: – Romantic poems “Ode on Melancholy” –transience; – 19th century landscape paintings – Pre-Raphaelite poem “The Blessed Damozel” –3 lilies – "Should Wizard Hit Mommy?" –the animals // father // d

aughter• Background images with symbolic meanings:

– “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”; “Mariana”; “The Lady of Shalott”; “When I am Dead, My Dearest” “The Bourne”

Page 4: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Different Usages of Nature (2)Different Usages of Nature (2)

• ‘Realistic’ Description or hardship: – the painting Cabbage, melon and cucumber by Juan

Cotán 1602, Dorothy Wordsworth’s journal; “The Jilting of Granny Weatherall”

• ‘Natural’ Existence: – “A Slumber did my Spirit Seal”

• From a Literal Journey to a Symbolic Quest:– “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud,” “Tinturn Abbey” – “The Blind Man” – 〈安卓珍妮〉 ; Surfacing; Into the Woods

Page 5: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Different Usages of Nature (3): Different Usages of Nature (3): landscape and symbolslandscape and symbols

Page 6: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Different Usages of Nature (4): Different Usages of Nature (4): frames and symbolsframes and symbols

Page 7: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism: Basic DefinitionsEcocriticism: Basic Definitions• Ecology (Cambridge Dic.): the relationships betw

een the air, land, water, animals, plants, etc., usually of a particular area, or the scientific study of this.

• Environmentalism: protecting the earth from human pollution and destruction.

• Ecocriticism: Not just the studies of nature in literature; “ecocriticism has distinguished itself, debates notwithstanding, first by the ethical stand it takes, its commitment to the natural world as an important thing rather than simply as an object of thematic study, and, secondly, by its commitment to making connections ” (source).

Page 8: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism: Starting QuestionsEcocriticism: Starting Questions

• Which of the above examples have ecological consciousness?

• Which of the following is hurting the environment or the Earth? – meat eating; – wearing fake leather jacket, leather jacket, mink fur coat, amber

earrings, leather boots, – overuse of plastic bags, paper bags and plastic packaging;

• What does ‘to protect the Earth’ mean? What does ‘Nature’ or ‘the natural’ mean? Is anything ‘natural’ the best?

• Derrida argues that there is nothing outside of text; but another philosopher Kate Soper warns, "it is not language which has a hole in the ozone layer.” Which do you agree with?

Page 9: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism & EnvironmentalismEcocriticism & Environmentalism

• Damages we have done to the Earth: the degradation of soil, air and water, the loss of biodiversity, global warming, the depletion of the ozone layer, rising human population and consumption levels,

• Exploitation: Consumption -- Eating animals; Production - subordinate humans, natural beings and the earth to commodity productions (Literature is not exempt from i

Page 10: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism: General IntroductionEcocriticism: General Introduction• Premise:

Our embeddedness within an increasingly endangered earth.

• Major claims: 1. Affirms nature writings (of Thoreau, Hawthorn,

Romantic Poets & the contemporary ones): the ecocritics rigorously defend literature's capacity– to refer to a natural reality, – to realize the relations between landscape and lifest

yle, and – to remind us of non-human perspectives (of animals,

trees, rivers, mountains) towards an "environmental literacy".

Page 11: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism: General Introduction (2)Ecocriticism: General Introduction (2)• Major claims: 2. To regain a sense of the inextricability of nature

and culture, physis and techne, earth and artifact-consumption and destruction.“ Does ecology include Internet & the flows of capital?

3. Critique of Current Critical Schools as 'Cold War criticism' 'Global Warming criticism'– with their focus on human creativity, human agency

and human social relations,– perpetuate that binary opposition of the human to th

e non-human, culture to nature.

Page 12: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism: MethodologiesEcocriticism: Methodologies

1. Critiquing the Canon1. the Hebrew creation in Genesis I - "not only esta

blished a dualism of man and nature but also insisted that it is God's will that man exploit nature for his proper ends' (Lyn White Jr. 'The Historical Roots of Our Ecological

Crisis': 10). 2. classical tragedy -- reinforces the anthropocentric

'assumption that nature exist for the benefit of mankind,”

3. the pastoral tradition - a form of escapist fantasy, valorizing a tamed and idealized nature over wild no less than urban environments.

Page 13: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Ecocriticism: MethodologiesEcocriticism: Methodologies

2. Reframing the text – e.g. “The Blind Man” in the context of the natural world;

3. Revaluing Nature Writing –e.g. Alfred Leopold’s Sand Country Almanac;

4. Return to Romanticism’s “neopastoral”;

5. Reconnecting the social and the ecological e.g. Feminization of Nature; exploitation of the aborigines and their lands;

6. Regrounding (and reshaping) language.

Page 14: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Issue I: culture and natureIssue I: culture and nature

• How is culture related to nature? (or City and Country?)

• Different definitions of culture – (Ref. Bate 3-5)1. Cultivation – Earliest definition (middle English to 18th century): ‘a cultivated

field or piece of land’ – Late middle English: from cultivated land to the action of

cultivation; – Early 17th century: extended to other forms of farming (of fish,

oysters, bees, silk)– 19th century: organic growth in the scientific sense (a culture of

cholera germs)

2. Improvement of mind and manners by education and training, since early 16th century

Page 15: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Issue I: culture and natureIssue I: culture and natureDifferent definitions of culture –

In the 19th century, with the dimunition of the proportion of the population involved in tillage and the rapid growth of industrialization, the old sense died and the new one was further developed;

20th century: applied to the ‘aesthetic sphere.’ ‘refinement of mind, tastes, and manners’ => ‘artistic and intellectual side of human civilization’ culture vs. nature

Page 16: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Issue II: the picturesque = aestheticIssue II: the picturesque = aestheticization of natureization of nature

• The problematic (Ref. Bate 136-) : “The picturesque was among the first artistic movements in history to throw out the Classical premise that art should imitate nature and to propose instead that nature should imitate art. It sought to treat entire landscapes in the manner in which earlier cultures designed gardens. . . . Garden landscaped park – ‘seemingly natural, but in fact highly artful.’

Page 17: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Issue II: the picturesque = aestheticIssue II: the picturesque = aestheticization of natureization of nature

• The word “landscape” –land-scape “land as shaped, as arranged, by a viewer. The point of view is that of the human observer, not the land itself.” (Bate 132)

• “Environmentalism” – environ means ‘around’. Environmentalists are people who care about the world around us: anthropocentrism, the valuation of nature only in so far it radiates out from humankind, remains a given (Bate 138). deep ecology: “at the center of the deep ecological project is a critique of Cartesian dualism [of mind and matter, self and Other] and mastery.” How do we avoid being anthropocentric?

Page 18: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Examples I: Wordsworth & Examples I: Wordsworth & the Picturesque the Picturesque

• Bate draws upon Wordsworth as an exemplar of ecocritical thinking, for Wordsworth did not view nature in Enlightenment terms - as that which must be tamed, ordered, and utilised - but as an area to be inhabited and reflected upon.

Page 19: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Parody of the PicturesqueParody of the Picturesque

• Dr. Syntax

• In Search of the PICturesque

Page 20: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Parody of the PicturesqueParody of the Picturesque

• Dr. Syntax In Search of the PICturesque

The aesthete bemuses the locals

Page 21: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

The PicturesqueThe Picturesque• Gilpin’s “Northern Tour”

No image.

Harmoniously arranged cows

Page 22: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Parody of the PicturesqueParody of the Picturesque• Dr. Syntax In Search of the PICturesque

Not so harmoniously arranged cows, drawn ‘after nature’

Page 23: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

A Parody of the PicturesqueA Parody of the Picturesque

The perils of the picturesque

Page 24: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Wordsworth on the PicturesqueWordsworth on the Picturesque

• “He [another poet] used to go out with a pencil and a tablet, and note what struck him, thus: ‘an old tower,’ ‘a dashing stream,’ ‘a green slope,’ and make a picture out of it . . .But Nature does not allow an inventory to be made of her charms! He should have left his pencil behind, and gone forth in a meditative spirit; and, on a later day, he should have embodied in verse not all that he had noted, but what he best remembered of the scene, . . . “ (qtd in Bate 148)

Page 25: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

““Tinturn Abbey” Tinturn Abbey” • The

picturesque

Page 26: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

““Tinturn Abbey” Tinturn Abbey”

• Wordsworth’s omission of the abbey: to avoid the picturesque or to avoid the implied social relations of the landscape

• Describes the interaction of nature and self (e.g. “Once again/Do I behold these steep and lofty cliffs. . .”)

• Self cliff; cottage larger landscape; • ll 94-102. “refuses to carve the world into object

and subject; the same force animates both consciousness and ‘all things.’

Page 27: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Note: Romanticism from Different Note: Romanticism from Different PerspectivesPerspectives

• Deconstruction & Feminism - what Romanticism really valorizes is not nature/femal

e, but the human/male imagination, human language and male quest;

• New Historicism-– the ideological function of romantic imagination and p

astoral was to disguise the exploitative nature of contemporary social relations;

• Bate – – Wordsworth repositioned in a tradition of environment

al consciousness, according to which human well-being is understood to be coordinate with the ecological health of the land. (p. 162)

Page 28: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Examples II: Nature & Childhood Examples II: Nature & Childhood Romanticized? Romanticized?

• Immortality Ode: Structure – • Stanzas I-II: past glory vs. his present sense of

loss; • Stanzas III – IV: his confirmation of the present

beings while missing the visionary gleam bespoken by a tree, a field and the pansy;

• Stanzas V-VII – the process of human (our) growth and learning of different ‘arts,’ lies and imitation in the lap of ‘Earth’

• Stanza VIII – XI – reconfirmation of both past affections, recollections and truths and the present natural beings and child (child --we)

Page 29: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Examples II: Nature & Childhood Examples II: Nature & Childhood Romanticized? Romanticized?

• Immortality Ode:

• Do you agree that the child is father of the man?

• How is nature presented in this poem?

• How does Wordsworth resolve the issue of inevitable aging, forgetting and death?

Page 30: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Examples III --“To Autumn”: Examples III --“To Autumn”: Weather and Time Weather and Time

• A New Critical Reading of the poem: as a simultaneous confirmation, prolonging of autumn’s sensual beauty and acknowledgement of its closeness to death.

Page 31: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

““TTO O

AAUUTTUUMMN”N”

Outline: 1. the sensual beauties of autumn in its very moment

s--early, mid and late autumn with their specific kinds of beauty.A. fruitionB. storageC. music

2. Transience vs. prolonging the effectsA. examples of transience + prolongment:

1. From “never cease” to last oozing, bloom the soft-dying day, stubble-plains, gnats

2. Actions gets smaller and smaller, but accumulated to show autumn’s richness

B. effects prolonged by the mellifluous sounds and long vowels.

C. Long sentences throughout the whole poem.

Page 32: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

““TO TO

AAUUTTUUMMN”N”

Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness,

Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun;

Conspiring with him how to load and bless

With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eves run;

To bend with apples the moss'd cottage-trees,

And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core;

To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel shells

With a sweet kernel; to set budding more,

And still more, later flowers for the bees,

Until they think warm days will never cease,

For Summer has o'er-brimm'd their clammy cells.

(personification+ action, alliteration; sensual images )

Page 33: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

““TO TO

AAUUTTUUMMN”N”

Who hath not seen thee oft amid thy store?

Sometimes whoever seeks abroad may find

Thee sitting careless on a granary floor,

Thy hair soft-lifted by the winnowing wind;

Or on a half-reap'd furrow sound asleep,

Drows'd with the fume of poppies, while thy hook

Spares the next swath and all its twined flowers:

And sometimes like a gleaner thou dost keep

Steady thy laden head across a brook;

Or by a cyder-press, with patient look,

Thou watchest the last oozings hours by hours.

Blue– images of death and disappearance

Page 34: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

““TO TO

AAUUTTUUMMN”N”

Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they?

Think not of them, thou hast thy music too,--

While barred clouds bloom the soft-dying day,

And touch the stubble-plains with rosy hue;

Then in a wailful choir the small gnats mourn

Among the river sallows, borne aloft

Or sinking as the light wind lives or dies;

And full-grown lambs loud bleat from hilly bourn;

Hedge-crickets sing; and now with treble soft

The red-breast whistles from a garden-croft;

And gathering swallows twitter in the skies.

Page 35: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Keats’ Life and world around Keats’ Life and world around the the

time of composing the poem,time of composing the poem, 1819 1819• Restoration of the monarchy in France in

1815.• His brother Tom's death in December, 1818• Keats wrote a large amount of poems from

1819 to 1820; his second volume of poems appeared in July 1820.

• Soon afterwards, by now very ill with tuberculosis, he set off with a friend to Italy, where he died the following February (1821).

Page 36: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Other Views of “To Autumn”Other Views of “To Autumn”• “The whole point of Keats’ great and (politically)

reactionary book was not to enlist poetry in the service of social and political causes. . .but to dissolve social and political conflicts in the mediations of art and beauty.(J. MacGann, 1985: 53)

• “What Keats said to his readers—and his rulers—is comparable to what Galileo is reputed to have muttered after his forced recantation to the Inquisition: “And yet it moves.” (Hawthorn 1996: 176, 179) desperate confirmation of his belief in life and its contraries

• A feminist reading of the presentation of autumn as a woman.

Page 37: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Examples III --“To Autumn”: Examples III --“To Autumn”: Weather and Time Weather and Time

• (Bate 105) Air quality is of the highest importance for those whose lungs have been invaded by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Keats was hurried to death . . . by the weather.

• Bad weather with humid fog in 1816-1818, but a beautiful autumn in 1819. cause –the eruption of Tambora volcano in Indonesia in 1815. The effect lasted for three years, straining the growth capacity of life across the planet.(Bate 97)

Page 38: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

Examples III --“To Autumn”: Examples III --“To Autumn”: Weather and Time Weather and Time

• A poem of networks, links, bonds and correspondences. Linguistically it achieves its most characteristic effects by making metaphors seem like metonymies. (e.g. mist and fruitfulness, bosom-friend and sun, load and bless – not naturally linked, but Keats makes the links seem natural.)

• Also, syntactial, metrical and aural interlinking. • Human center? They are suspended, immobile. • The last stanza – at-homeness-with-all-living-thi

ngs

Page 39: Ecocriticism & Some Romantic Poems Does Nature Exist beyond Human Languages?

References: References:

• Websites: http://www.eng.fju.edu.tw/Literary_Criticism/ecocriticism/

• ASAL Introduction to Ecocriticism: http://www.asle.umn.edu/archive/intro/intro.html

• Bate, Johnathan. The Song of the Earth.