Poetry, Space, Landscape: Toward a New Theory

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Cambridge University Press, 1995 M04 20 - 322 pages
Why was the art of landscape painting invented in the fifth century BC, abandoned with the collapse of Rome, and revived again in the High Middle Ages? Did the Greeks, or the ancient Christians perceive the natural world differently from the way we do now? In Poetry, Space, Landscape, Chris Fitter traces the history of nature-sensibility from the ancient world to the English Renaissance, setting poems and paintings in the widely differing cultural contexts that created them. He suggests a new social and historical theory of the conceptualisation of space, explaining the rise and fall of the idea of 'landscape'. And he argues that enduring basic categories of perception create different readings of natural reality determined by our social and material relations with nature.

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Contents

an historical outline in
25
Landscape and the Bible
53
Late antiquity and the Church Fathers
84
Medieval into Renaissance
156
Seventeenthcentury English poetry
233
Select bibliography
316
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