The Locator -- [(subject = "Human ecology")]

4511 records matched your query       


Record 17 | Previous Record | MARC Display | Next Record | Search Results
Author:
Heringman, Noah, author.
Title:
Deep time : a literary history / Noah Heringman.
Publisher:
Princeton University Press,
Copyright Date:
2023
Description:
xv, 297 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Subject:
1700-1799
Geology in literature.
English literature--18th century--History and criticism.
Literature and science--Great Britain--18th century--History.
Technical writing--Great Britain--18th century--History.
Geological time and literature.
Human ecology and literature.
English literature.
Geology in literature.
Literature and science.
Technical writing.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
History.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 271-285) and index.
Contents:
Primitive rocks and primitive customs: geological and human time in the Pacific voyage narratives of John Reinhold and George Foster -- The "Profoundest depths of time" in Buffon's Epochs of nature -- William Blake, the ballad revival, and the deep past of poetry -- The descent into deep time in Darwin and Lubbock: voyages narrative, comparative method, and human animality -- Afterword. Evolutionary nostalgia and the romance of origins.
Summary:
"Deep Time: A Literary History challenges the exclusive association between deep time and the modern science of geology by focusing on late Enlightenment writings that used narrative form to integrate new empirical data and methods with Western and non-Western traditions of chronology, earth history, and human origins. Choosing the mid-eighteenth century as a starting point, Heringman aims to demonstrate how deep time became associated with Earth history in the first place, expanding its conceptual domain to include colonial natural history, oral tradition, and scientific romance-all frontiers of the expanded time horizons associated with modernity. It considers the conceptual opening of a modern geological timescale in literary, scientific, and travel writing in the late-Enlightenment/Romantic period, with chapters on the explorer-naturalist team of John Reinhold and George Forster, who sailed with Captain Cook (1772-1775); Buffon's protogeochronological Epochs of Nature (1778); Herder, Blake, and prehistory through oral tradition; and Charles Darwin's dialogue with anthropology and archaeology, especially in The Descent of Man (1871). When eighteenth- and nineteenth-century explorers, naturalists, poets, and philosophers wrote about the "abyss of time," they referred to a large and diverse set of new ideas that unsettled the established time scale: ideas about cultural evolution inspired by Pacific peoples recently encountered by James Cook and other voyagers; a new sense of the depth and diversity of the Earth's strata, produced by increased attention to their structure and deposition; the study of oral traditions by poets and scholars associated with the ballad revival; and the study of non-Western scriptures such as the Mahabharata, which calculated time on an entirely different scale. The latter two pursuits dovetailed with the investigations of voyagers from Johann Reinhold Forster to Charles Darwin, who sought to measure the age of non-European civilizations by way of the geological age of their environments. Ultimately, Heringman argues that the concept of deep time, now associated primarily with modern geology, "was a composite of human and natural history to begin with.""--Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
0691235791
9780691235790
0691236771
9780691236773
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1313902569
LCCN:
2022015618
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

Initiate Another SILO Locator Search

This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.