A compelling contribution to Scottish ecocriticism by the leading academic in the field, Monika Szuba’s new monograph offers an insightful and inspiring reassessment of the idea of landscape in the works of some of Scotland’s most celebrated modern writers. A must-read for anyone interested in Scottish nature writing!

- Camille Manfredi, University of Brest,

Monika Szuba’s perceptive close readings of five key Scottish writers mark an important contribution to the study of Scottish literature and landscape. Informed by phenomenology, this lucid and engaging work opens new paths in understanding modern Scottish writing on landscape, with dynamic embodied experience at the core of our relationship with the more-than-human world.

- Louisa Gairn, author of Ecology and Modern Scottish Literature,

Landscape Poetics is an interdisciplinary study that seeks to place Scottish writers in relation to their landscape, by investigating how the self is entwined in place. By examinining the writing and practice of particular modern and contemporary authors in the light of environmental thought, the study explores their lived, organic connection to the landscape. Landscape Poetics presents an argument that the relationship between author and world is expressed through the language of vibrant and engaged experience. Shepherd, MacCaig, Jamie, Clark and Finlay are seen as reinventing the perception of the landscape by proposing that the subject is no longer involved in the act of objectification, but is instead an embodied self that enters place, perceiving it more fully.
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Reassesses Scottish textual practice in the context of the natural and post-natural landscapes
Acknowledgements Introduction: Towards a Phenomenological Reading of the Scottish Landscape 1.‘This intricate interplay’: The Interconnectedness of Place, Atmosphere and Living Matter in Nan Shepherd 2. ‘Where are your dictionaries of the wind, the grasses?’: Logos of the Landscape in Norman MacCaig’s Poetry 3. ‘A wing’s beat and it’s gone’: Between Transience and Permanence in Kathleen Jamie’s Writing 4. ‘A patch pegged out for closer examination’: Thomas A Clark Poetic Practice 5. ‘Acts of communal memory’: Landscape, Memory and Place-names in Alec Finlay’s Work ReferencesIndex
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Covers a range of the relationships between landscape, literature, and culture

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781474484213
Publisert
2025-08-01
Utgiver
Edinburgh University Press; Edinburgh University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
248

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Monika Szuba is Associate Professor in Literature at the Institute of English and American Studies, University of Gdańsk. Her research is concerned with modern and contemporary literature informed by Environmental Humanities, with particular interest in phenomenology. She is the author of Contemporary Scottish Poetry and the Natural World: Burnside, Jamie, Robertson and White (Edinburgh University Press, 2019), co-editor of Literary Invention and the Cartographic Imagination: Early Modern to Late Modern (Brill, 2022), The Poetics of Space and Place in Scottish Literature (Palgrave, 2019) and Reading Victorian Literature: Essays in Honour of J. Hillis Miller (Edinburgh University Press, 2019), and editor of Boundless Scotland: Space in Scottish Fiction (Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego, 2015).