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Literary Invention and the Cartographic Imagination: Early Modern to Late Modern: Spatial Practices, cartea 38

Monika Szuba, Julian Wolfreys
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 oct 2022
Literary Invention and the Cartographic Imagination: Early Modern to Late Modern is a wide-ranging, inter- and transdisciplinary approach grounded in the twin rigors of theory and history, which, through close readings of authors from Edmund Spenser to Olga Tokarczuk, and through considered discussions of the ideologies of walking and mapping, in performance art and cultural representation, assesses and analyses the significance of maps to literary texts, and which examines the ways in which the literary maps imaginary and real worlds. Together, the essays demonstrate convincingly the close relationship between text, map and culture.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004427112
ISBN-10: 9004427112
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Spatial Practices


Notă biografică

Monika Szuba is Associate Professor at the Institute of English and American Studies, University of Gdańsk. She is the author of Contemporary Scottish Poetry and the Natural World: Burnside, Jamie, Robertson and White (2019) and co-edited with Julian Wolfreys The Poetics of Space and Place in Scottish Literature (2019) and Reading Victorian Literature: Essays in Honour of J. Hillis Miller (2019).

Julian Wolfreys, Independent Scholar, is the author of Dickens’s London: Perception, Subjectivity, and Phenomenal Urban Multiplicity (2015), Literature, in Theory: Tropes, Subjectivities, Responses and Responsibilities (2010) and the editor of Glossalalia: An Alphabet of Critical Keywords (2003).

Cuprins

List of Figures

Notes on Contributors

Introduction
Monika Szuba and Julian Wolfreys

1 The Poet, Voyager, and Cartographer Are ‘of Imagination All Compact’ Crossing the Borders of Early Modern Poetry and Cartography
Małgorzata Grzegorzewska

2 Fragmented Body versus Cartographic Representation The Early Modern Subject and the Marlovian Transgressors
Klaudia Łączyńska

3 Marcus the Magnificent Closure and Resolution in Joël Dicker’s The Truth about the Harry Quebert Affair
Tom Ue

4 ‘To Deploy an Errant Eye’ Olga Tokarczuk’s ‘Early Modern’ Fantasia
Julian Wolfreys

5 The Mapping of Empire in Hilary Davies’ “Imperium”
Jean Ward

6 Mapping and Unmapping the World Atlas of Remote Islands by Judith Schalansky versus Unmapping Memory. Looking for Hildegard of Bingen by Desmond Graham
Olga Kubińska and Wojciech Kubiński

7 Charting Milan in Central Asia Lombard Maps and Asian Toponymy in Luciano Erba’s Poetry
Samuele Fioravanti

8 A ‘Monolithic Map/ of We Know Not What’ Alec Finlay’s Chorographic Poetics
Monika Szuba

9 Unseeable Maps The Experience of Space in the Blind Walk Performance
Izabela Zawadzka

10 Maps, Literature, and Law’s Idiocy Literary Tropes as Incentive, Ground and Veil for Taking the Commons
Frans-Willem Korsten

11 Mapping the Sacramental Inner Circle by Jerzy Peterkiewicz
Aleksandra Słyszewska

12 Camino (Hyper)Real California’s Cartographic Imaginations
Grzegorz Welizarowicz

Index