Representations of Culture: Thomas Hardy's Wessex & Victorian AnthropologyPeter Lang, 2007 - 154 páginas Representations of Culture places Thomas Hardy's Wessex - his fictional representation of rural England - within the framework of anthropology, an emergent discipline at the time. Informed by both intellectual biography and close textual readings, this book argues that Hardy's lifelong interests in folklore, customs, local history, myth, archaeology, and communal narrative history represent the most «modern» (rather than simply traditional) aspect of his thinking - the ways in which anthropological viewpoints associated with Tylor, Lang, and Frazer shaped his understanding and representation of Wessex. |
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Página 14
... culture , much as Hardy had defined his subject , Wessex : " Culture , or Civilization , taken in its wide ethnographic sense , is that complex whole which includes knowledge , law , custom , and any other capabilities and habits ...
... culture , much as Hardy had defined his subject , Wessex : " Culture , or Civilization , taken in its wide ethnographic sense , is that complex whole which includes knowledge , law , custom , and any other capabilities and habits ...
Página 34
... Culture and Hardy's explorations - tentatively introduced in Desperate Remedies and further defined over the next quarter century in what would collectively become the Wessex novels - suggest quite similar projects : the representation ...
... Culture and Hardy's explorations - tentatively introduced in Desperate Remedies and further defined over the next quarter century in what would collectively become the Wessex novels - suggest quite similar projects : the representation ...
Página 35
... culture out of which a newer has been evolved . " ( PC I , 15 ) 1 Such traits , Tylor claimed , were analogous to vestigial organs , performing no useful function in the culture in which they survive : The ordeal of the Key and Bible ...
... culture out of which a newer has been evolved . " ( PC I , 15 ) 1 Such traits , Tylor claimed , were analogous to vestigial organs , performing no useful function in the culture in which they survive : The ordeal of the Key and Bible ...
Contenido
Beginnings Descriptions of Local Culture | 63 |
An Experiment in Tragic Form Anthropological | 97 |
Beyond Myth The Presence of the Past | 121 |
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Representations of Culture: Thomas Hardy's Wessex & Victorian Anthropology Michael A. Zeitler Vista previa limitada - 2007 |
Representations of Culture: Thomas Hardy's Wessex & Victorian Anthropology Michael A. Zeitler Vista de fragmentos - 2007 |
Términos y frases comunes
ancient animism anthropological argued associations become beginning body called celebrations century chapter character Clodd collective connection contemporary continued critical culture customs dance death described Dorset early Egdon England evidence example experience expression face fiction fire folklore Frazer gives Golden Bough Greek Greenwood Tree hand Hardy's heath human ideas importance individual intellectual interest John Jude knowledge later living look marriage material meaning memory mind moral myth narrative Native natural notes novels objects observation origin past play plot possible present primitive Public reference remain representation represented Return Review ritual rural scene scientific seasonal seemed sense shared similar social society spirit story structure suggests symbolic tell Tess theories things Thomas Hardy thought throughout tion traditional tragedy tragic trees turn Tylor universe village Voice Wessex whole writes young