The eye of history: Literature and cartography in the colonial encounter.
详细信息   
  • 作者:Avery ; Bruce Robert.
  • 学历:Doctor
  • 年:1992
  • 毕业院校:University of California
  • CBH:9235700
  • Country:USA
  • 语种:English
  • FileSize:9007304
  • Pages:275
文摘
This study examines the dynamics of representation in narrative and maps through an analysis of verb families linked to eyesight and interpretations of landscape description in poetry and prose. It begins in Early Modern England,where there was an ongoing debate over the value of different modes of representation. Sidney and Gosson,for example,argued about the usefulness and effect of literary representation,and another conflict existed between exponents of literary representation and exponents of cartography. Cartographers such as John Norden and Jonathan Speed argued for the inadequacy of narrative as a descriptive mode. Edmund Spenser displayed the susceptibility of maps to manipulation and propagandistic use in his poetry. Concurrent with the rise of the map were territorial nationalism and landscape poetry. Both phenomena reflect the commodification of land. The linkage of territorial nationalism and cartography also riddles discourse on Irish nationalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. W. B. Yeats argues for a poetics that redescribes the Irish landscape outside the terms established by the English. James Joyce criticizes this literary nationalism in terms explicitly linked to cartography. In India,the Royal Geographic Society participated in the spread of English culture through cartographic practices. Rudyard Kiplings Kim develops a narrative style that inculcates the perspective of the map within its landscapes,and ultimately constructs the identity of Kim in cartographic terms. Salman Rushdie,in Midnights Children,deconstructs that narrative mode,presenting multiple perspectives on identity and nationhood instead of mimicking the monocular perspective of cartography.

© 2004-2018 中国地质图书馆版权所有 京ICP备05064691号 京公网安备11010802017129号

地址:北京市海淀区学院路29号 邮编:100083

电话:办公室:(+86 10)66554848;文献借阅、咨询服务、科技查新:66554700