
"Kate Rigby is working in an increasingly important
area of ecocritical and romantic studies, and she brings to her
task an impressive combination of erudition and scholarship, as
well as a graceful prose style. Topographies of the Sacred
is particularly valuable because of the comparative element it brings
to this work. Rigby's analysis of literary 'nature' will occasion
discussion, debate, and ongoing research."
Ashton Nichols, Dickinson College, author of The Poetics
of Epiphany and The Revolutionary "I"
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Although the British romantic poetsnotably, Blake, Wordsworth,
and Byronhave been the subjects of previous ecocritical
examinations, Kate Rigby's Topographies of the Sacred
is the first book to compare English and German literary models
of romanticism. Rigby treats not only canonical British romantics
but an array of major figures in Continental literature, philosophy,
and natural history, including Rousseau, Herder, Goethe, Schelling,
Schiller, and Alexander von Humboldt. Following the pioneering
work of Jonathan Bate and Karl Kroeber, she probes romantic understandings
of nature, the source of the sacred, the power of place, and the
role of literature, with a view to uncovering the tensions and
ambivalences within the European romantic tradition. The result
is a synthetic and philosophically inflected study that looks
at the literary and ecological significance of place within a
broad cultural context.
Kate Rigby, Senior Lecturer in German Studies
and Comparative Literature at Monash University, Australia, is
the author of Transgressions of the Feminine: Tragedy, Enlightenment,
and the Figure of Woman in Classical German Drama.
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