From Thomas Jefferson's Monticello to Michelle Obama's White House organic garden, the image of America as a nation of farmers has persisted from the beginnings of the American experiment. In this rich and evocative collection of agrarian writing from the past two centuries, writers from Hector St. Jean de Crevecoeur to Wendell Berry reveal not only the great reach and durability of the American agrarian ideal, but also the ways in which society has contested and confronted its relationship to agriculture over the course of generations. Drawing inspiration from Virgil's agrarian epic poem, Georgics, this collection presents a complex historical portrait of the American character through its relationship to the land. From the first European settlers eager to cultivate new soil, to the Transcendentalist, utopian, and religious thinkers of the nineteenth century, American society has drawn upon the vision of a pure rural life for inspiration. Back-to-the-land movements have surged and retreated in the past centuries yet provided the agrarian roots for the environmental movement of the past forty years. Interpretative essays and a sprinkling of illustrations accompany excerpts from each of these periods of American agrarian thought, providing a framework for understanding the sweeping changes that have confronted the nation's landscape.
. . To sense the achievement, one has to read the collection as a whole . . . and they can take one's breath away even as they continue breathing." This ebook edition includes only the English language translation of the Georgics.
Lewis-Stempel, John. 2015. Meadowland: The Private Life of an English Field. London: Black Swan. Lodge, Sarah. 2001. 'A Life Outside: Clare's Mole Catcher'. John Clare Society Journal 20: 5–18. Lucas, John. 2007. 'Introduction'.
The voyage of Columbus as retold by Stephen Greenblatt in Marvelous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World illustrates this type of confrontation between the old world with the reality of a new world and the subsequent intellectual as ...
... Women Writers and Spirituality: A Piercing Darkness (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017). He has also published Mary Butts and ... British Experimental Women's Fiction 1945–1975: 'Slipping Through the Labels' was published by Palgrave in 2021 ...
... American Georgics , his most powerful and coherent writing , stand at the beginning of a long tradition in its own right , which includes such works as Gregorio Gutiérrez González's Memoir on the Cultivation of Maize in Antioquia ( 1881 ) ...
At the center of this book is a suite of poems inspired by Virgil's Georgics, or "poems of pastoral instruction." In Rosen's case, he is more the student than the teacher.
Thus does Poe provide a literary example of mankind, in good Hegelian or Feuerbachian fashion, reclaiming the ... The Berenice of classical antiquity promises her hair to Aphrodite in exchange for the safe return of her husband, ...
A masterful new verse translation of one of the greatest nature poems ever written. Virgil's Georgics is a paean to the earth and all that grows and grazes there.
This text examines the cultural conditions that brought agriculture and science together in 19th-century America.
Överland, Orm. James Fenimore Cooper's The Prairie: The Making and Meaning of an American Classic. ... In James Fenimore Cooper: His Country and His Art, Papers from the 2001 Cooper Seminar, edited by Hugh C. MacDougall, 72–76.