04949nam 2200613Ia 450 991045901360332120200520144314.01-282-99173-6978661299173890-420-3262-6(CKB)2560000000061687(EBL)668974(OCoLC)705001534(SSID)ssj0000472637(PQKBManifestationID)12230932(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000472637(PQKBWorkID)10435842(PQKB)10040594(MiAaPQ)EBC668974(Au-PeEL)EBL668974(CaPaEBR)ebr10447249(CaONFJC)MIL299173(OCoLC)700406684(nllekb)BRILL9789042032620(EXLCZ)99256000000006168719900719d2011 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrReflective landscapes of the Anglophone countries[electronic resource] /edited by Pascale GuibertAmsterdam ;New York Rodopi20111 online resource (294 p.)Spatial practices ;11Articles from an international conference held at the University of Caen Basse-Normandie, France, 14-16 June 2007.90-420-3261-8 Includes bibliographical references and index.Preliminary Material --Acknowledgements --Notes on Contributors --Introduction /Pascale Guibert --From Interiority to Landscapes and Seascapes: The Metaphors of Reflection in Locke’s: Essay Concerning Human Understanding /Matthieu Haumesser --“Reflections on Reflections”: Wordsworth’s Narcissistic Landscapes /Aurélie Thiria-Meulemans --“So the Horizon Line Vanishes”: Landscape and Abstraction in England from the 1930's to the 1950's /Sophie Aymes --Out of the Garrison and Beyond: The Rewriting of the Landscape Tradition in Contemporary Canadian Fiction /Claire Omhovère --One Land, Three Landscapes: Frank Gillen’s Alice Springs /Timothy Mason --Taking the High Road: The Form, Perception and Memory of Loch Lomond /Allan Ingram --Digging into the West: Tim Robinson’s Deep Landscapes /Eamonn Wall --The Wilderness as Symbolic Form – Thoreau, Grünewald and the Group of Seven /Jonathan Bordo --Landscape as Reflection in British Contemporary Art /Marjorie Vanbaelinghem --Early Wordsworth: Towards the Limits of the Picturesque /Laurent Folliot --Locations of Memory: A Psycho-Spatial Reading of Traumatic Landscape in Owen Sheers’ “Mametz Wood” /Robert Burden --Negotiating Colonial Contradiction: E. M. Forster’s and V. S. Naipaul’s Negative Landscapes /Catherine Lanone --The Desert Landscape: A Sunlit Landscape Amid the Night of Nonbeing /David Jasper --Page-Landscapes in the Theater of Gertrude Stein /Isabelle Alfandary --Encountering the Unmappable: The Landscape in Heart of Darkness (Joseph Conrad) /Richard Pedot --“Entering the Edges”: Visual and Verbal Landscapes in Robert Creeley’s Collaborations /Barbara Montefalcone --Index /Pascale Guibert.Too many landscapes have been reduced to silent commodities by being put into golden frames on top of our fireplaces. Too many landscapes have been reified by being considered as objects holding forth referents to an omnipotent looker-on, with his/her language ever ready to seize and transcribe. The articles gathered here, prolonging an international conference held at the University of Caen Basse-Normandie (France), 14-16 June 2007, set the landscapes loose again by engaging with their essentially relational quality. What makes this volume particularly stimulating and critically innovative is this initial acknowledgement of a landscape’s reflectiveness – that is the fact that it contains unthought thought, and thus presents itself to us both passively and actively. This straightaway appraisal of the lines of flight in the seemingly static, tranquil images facing us, has opened the way to deeply critical readings bent on questioning old tracks, testing new itineraries, denying the closure of the subject. At the same time, and by way of consequence, it leads us to encounter the force in landscape. A force like an energy, an impetus, which makes it possible – if not advisable! – to still compose, read and enjoy landscapes in the XXIst century.Spatial Practices11.Cultural landscapesEnglish-speaking countriesEnglish-speaking countriesElectronic books.Cultural landscapes704.9436Guibert Pascale928752MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910459013603321Reflective landscapes of the Anglophone countries2087220UNINA02316nam 2200409 n 450 99639300540331620221108103134.0(CKB)4940000000110576(EEBO)2248513520(UnM)99867028(EXLCZ)99494000000011057619940429d1660 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|Some treasure fetched out of rubbish: or, Three short but seasonable treatises[electronic resource] (found in an heap of scattered papers), which Providence hath reserved for their service who desire to be instructed, from the Word of God, concerning the imposition and use of significant ceremonies in the worship of God. viz. I. A discourse upon 1 Cor. 14.40. Let all things be done decently and in order. Tending to search out the truth in this question, viz. Whether it be lawful for church-governours to command indifferent decent things in the administration of God's worship? II. An enquiry, whether the church may not, in the celebration of the Sacrament, use other rites significative than those expressed in the Scripture, or add to them of her own authority? III. Three arguments, syllogistically propounded and prosecuted against the surplice: the Cross in Baptism: and kneeling in the act of receiving the Lord's SupperLondon [s.n.]printed in the year, 1660[4], 75, [1] pJohn Cotton and Robert Nichols are identified within "To the Reader" as being the authors of the first 2 discourses and the third discourse, respectively.Annotation on Thomason copy: "Oct: 8".Reproduction of the original in the British Library.eebo-0018Rites and ceremoniesEarly works to 1800WorshipEarly works to 1800ChurchAuthorityEarly works to 1800Rites and ceremoniesWorshipChurchAuthorityCotton John1584-1652.793681Nichols RobertMr.196075Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996393005403316Some treasure fetched out of rubbish: or, Three short but seasonable treatises2399711UNISA