Lean Down Your Ear Upon the Earth, and Listen: Thomas Wolfe's Greener ModernismThis ecocritical study of Thomas Wolfe's body of fiction explores how the celebrated writer's storytelling is founded on his dramatization - and apprehension - of the natural world's integral presence in human lives. |
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Contenido
Chapter | 1 |
Chapter | 15 |
Chapter Three | 37 |
Chapter Four | 61 |
Chapter Five | 81 |
Chapter | 97 |
Notes | 119 |
Bibliography | 139 |
Términos y frases comunes
America Angel become birds chapter character close comes consciousness critical dark draw earth effects emotional environment environmental especially Eugene Eugene's eyes fact feelings felt fiction field figurative Gant Gant's George green heart hills human images imagination land landscape language leaves letter light literary literature living Look Homeward mind modernist Moreover mother mountains narrative natural world nature's never night nonhuman world notes novel objective observations organic passage passion person play presence Press protagonists references result Review rhetoric River rock romantic scene seasons seemed sense serves setting Similarly smell sounds space spirit Spring story streets studies style subjective suggests surroundings texts things Thomas Wolfe thought town treated treatment trees University urban vision vitality whole wild wilderness wind Wolfe's writing YCGHA York young