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Literature and Geography: The Writing of Space throughout History

English

In a period marked by the Spatial Turn, time is not the main category of analysis any longer. Space is. It is now considered as a central metaphor and topos in literature, and literary criticism has seized space as a new tool. Similarly, literature turns out to be an ideal field for geography. This book examines the cross-fertilization of geography and literature as disciplines, languages and methodologies. In the past two decades, several methods of analysis focusing on the relationship and interconnectedness between literature and geography have flourished. Literary cartography, literary geography and geocriticism (Westphal, 2007, and Tally, 2011) have their specificities, but they all agree upon the omnipresence of space, place and mapping at the core of analysis. Other approaches like ecocriticism (Buell, 2001, and Garrard, 2004), geopoetics (White, 1994), geography of literature (Moretti, 2000), studies of the inserted map (Ljunberg, 2012, and Pristnall and Cooper, 2011) and narrative cartography have likewise drawn attention to space. Literature and Geography: The Writing of Space Throughout History, following an international conference in Lyon bringing together literary academics, geographers, cartographers and architects in order to discuss literature and geography as two practices of space, shows that literature, along with geography, is perfectly valid to account for space. Suggestions are offered here from all disciplines on how to take into account representations and discourses since texts, including literary ones, have become increasingly present in the analysis of geographers. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 148 x 212mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Feb 2016
  • Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781443885485

About

Emmanuelle Peraldo is Senior Lecturer in British Eighteenth-Century Literature at the University Jean Moulin Lyon 3 and member of the Institute for Transtextual and Transcultural Studies. Her current research focuses on the link between geography and literature in the early modern period and more particularly in Daniel Defoe. Her PhD obtained in 2008 focused on Defoe and the writing of History. Her most recent publications are an article co-written with a geographer (Yann Calbérac) How to do narratives with maps? Cartography as a performative act in Gullivers Travels and Through the Looking-Glass in Reconstructions (2015) and a translation in French of Defoes Caledonia (Honoré Champion 2016).

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