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2016 | 12 |

Article title

“Birds have Proustian capacity for making remembrance” – a post-pastoral reading of John Lewis-Stempel’s Meadowland and the question of anthropomorphising animals

Title variants

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
The article proposes discussion of John Lewis-Stempel’s Meadowland (2015) developed along two perspectives. One is the post-pastoral reading as suggested by Terry Gifford. He offers a contemporary interpretative mode that draws from both the rich history of British pastoral and countryside writing and from recent ecocritical devices. Additionally, this paper aims to point out the manifold functions of anthropomorphism and presents it as the longestablished strategy of making sense of the ‘outer’ nature. Both animating non-humans in literary representation and post-pastoral depiction of British countryside prevail to be an expression of spatial proximity, and apparently an indispensable prerequisite for co-existence, for sharing material place. Far from causing confusion or misunderstanding, anthropomorphisation has an enduring power of organizing human experience and expressing interconnectedness. In historical terms, it remains a fact that people have always responded to the natural world, and that they have seen animals respond as well, thus turning them into agents.

Year

Volume

12

Physical description

Dates

published
2016

Contributors

References

  • Berger, John. 2009. Why look at animals? London: Penguin Books. [essay “Why Look at Animals?” taken from About Looking. 1980. John Berger]
  • Blake, William. c. 1801–3. “Auguries of Innocence” in The Ballads (or Pickering) Manuscript, https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Auguries_of_Innocence (10 March 2017).
  • Braidotti, Rosi. 2014. Po człowieku. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN.
  • Derrida, Jacques and David Wills. 2002. The Animal That Therefore I Am (More to Follow). Critical Inquiry 28(2): 369-418.
  • Derrida, Jacques – Jaques Derrida and the Question of “The Animal”, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ry49Jr0TFjk (24 February 2017).
  • Fudge, Erica. 2006. Ruminations 1. H-Animal. H-Net. The History of Animals. https://networks.h-net.org/node/16560/pages/32226/history-animals-erica-fudge (14 February 2017).
  • Gifford, Terry. 2016. Five Modes of ‘Listening Deeply’ to Pastoral Sounds. http://www.terrygifford.co.uk/ (10 February 2017).
  • Gifford, Terry. 2016. From Countryside to Environment: British Non-Fiction Prose Nature Writing 1960-1980. http://www.terrygifford.co.uk/ (20 February 2017).
  • Gifford, Terry. 2012. Pastoral, Anti-Pastoral and Post-Pastoral as Reading Strategies http://www.errygifford.co.uk/ (20 February 2017).
  • Hughes, Ted. 2005. “Swifts” in Collected Poems for Children, London: Faber and Faber. p.206.
  • Lestel, Dominique (translated by Peter Boyle). 2014. Epistemological Interlude. Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities 19(3): 151-160.
  • Lewis-Stempel, John. 2015. Meadowland. The Private Life of an English Meadow. London: Black Swan.
  • Park, Sowon S. 2013. “Who are these people?”Anthropomorphism, Dehumanization and the Question of the Other, Arcadia. International Journal for Literary Studies 48(1): 150–163.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11320/5678

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.hdl_11320_5678
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