In the First Country of Places: Nature, Poetry, and Childhood MemoryIn the First Country of Places explores how people s personal philosophies of nature shape their childhood memories and self-identities. Drawing upon written work and original interviews, the book describes uses of memory through the perspectives of five American Poets who represent different contemporary beliefs: William Bronk, David Ignatow, Audre Lorde, Marie Ponsot, and Henry Weinfield. These authors present their relationships with nature and childhood in the context of major Western traditions of philosophy and religion. Each poet confronts the modern scientific image of an alien nature within which histories of individuals are insignificant; and three poets elaborate alternative versions of connection with nature and their own past. This work opens new directions in the psychology of memory, developmental and environmental psychology, environmental studies, and the study of American poetry. |
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Contenido
Chapter Two Childhood and Nature | 21 |
William Bronk | 51 |
David Ignatow | 85 |
Audre Lorde and Marie Ponsot | 105 |
Chapter Six Childhood and Nature Reconsidered | 145 |
Chapter Seven A Recollective Psychology | 169 |
Epilogue | 195 |
Notes | 201 |
229 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
In the First Country of Places: Nature, Poetry, and Childhood Memory Louise Chawla Vista previa limitada - 1994 |
In the First Country of Places: Nature, Poetry, and Childhood Memory Louise Chawla Vista previa limitada - 1994 |
Términos y frases comunes
Admit Impediment adult Audre Lorde autobiographical beginning believed book’s century chapter Chawla child childhood and nature childhood memory Coleridge connection consciousness contemporary creative cultural daughter David Ignatow described earth Edith Cobb empiricist environmental memory Ever-Present Origin experience faith father feeling five poets forms Freud Gadamer Gebser Heidegger Henry Weinfield hermeneutic Hesiod hood human Husserl identification images imagination language lives Lorde and Ponsot Lorde’s M. H. Abrams Marie Ponsot meaning memories of nature men’s mental metaphor modern mother myth natural world nature’s Neisser Neoplatonic never Notebooks observed past people’s personal interview phenomenology philosophy physical Platonic poem poetic poetry poets present psychology reality relations remember Romantic sense Sigmund Freud spirit theory thought tion tradition trans True Minds truth ture Ulric Neisser University Press Vaughan and Traheme Whitman William Bronk William Carlos Williams William Wordsworth woman women words Wordsworth writing York