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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/13445
Title: REFUSE TO RELIC: NEOPASTORAL ARTIFACTS AND THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF ENVIRONMENT IN AMERICAN MODERNIST POETICS
Authors: Douglas, Jeffrey D.
Advisor: O`Connor, Mary
Jeffery Donaldson, Joseph Adamson
Department: English and Cultural Studies
Keywords: neopastoral;environmental aesthetics;picturesque;waste poetics;artifacts;object ontology;American Literature;American Material Culture;Archaeological Anthropology;Interdisciplinary Arts and Media;Literature in English, North America;Modern Literature;Social and Cultural Anthropology;American Literature
Publication Date: Oct-2013
Abstract: <p>Building on concepts of the pastoral, the picturesque, the “vernacular ruin,” and frontierism in an American context, this thesis explores the interest in ruin and commodity-oriented refuse within rural, wilderness, and what Leo Marx in <em>The Machine in the Garden</em> calls “middle ground” environments. Chapter one analyzes how “nature” has been conceptualized as a place where human-made objects become repurposed through the gaze of the spectator. Theories surrounding gallery and exhibition space, as well as archaeological practices related to garbage excavation, are assessed to determine how waste objects, when wrested out of context, become artifacts of cultural significance. Chapter two turns to focus on the settler experience of the frontier in order to locate a uniquely American evolution of the interest in everyday waste objects. Chapters three and four return to the rural and the pastoral to focus on Marx’s concept of the “middle ground.” In dialogue with Marx’s theories, I propose a definition of the “neopastoral” as that which evolves from the interjection of domestic waste into these middle spaces to the aesthetic appropriation of everyday, common objects in modernist American poetry. The final chapter focuses on selected poems by modernist writers such as Wallace Stevens, Robert Frost, and W.C. Williams to analyze their explicit references to everyday waste in conjunction with the mythologized American pastoral. These poets provide evidence for how the drive to poeticize an abandoned, human-made object’s proximity to a natural environment plays a significant role in the perception of the fragmented object-subject relationship in modernity.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/13445
Identifier: opendissertations/8265
9347
4614207
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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