Ecocritical reading in the poetry of Ted Hughes

This thesis explores Ted Hughes’s poetry between the 1950s and 1980s, focusing on an emergent eco-poetics and environmental consciousness in his representations of animals, environments, and natural phenomena. Whereas Hughes’s work has been studied in terms of animals, myths, and history, reading hi...

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Main Author: Tongsukkaeng, Chaiyon
Other Authors: Becket, Fiona ; Higgins, David
Published: University of Leeds 2015
Subjects:
821
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.689229
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6892292017-11-03T03:18:34ZEcocritical reading in the poetry of Ted HughesTongsukkaeng, ChaiyonBecket, Fiona ; Higgins, David2015This thesis explores Ted Hughes’s poetry between the 1950s and 1980s, focusing on an emergent eco-poetics and environmental consciousness in his representations of animals, environments, and natural phenomena. Whereas Hughes’s work has been studied in terms of animals, myths, and history, reading his poetry ecocritically brings rigorous focus to refine the idea of ‘nature’ and address questions of ecological interconnectedness and environmentalism. Engaging with wilderness/wildness in nature, this thesis discusses how poetic language appeals to the unknowability of other-than-human creatures through Hughes’s fascination with creative-destructive forces. His poetry addresses issues of animal subjectivity and environmental ethics in relation to endangered species and wildlife extinction. This study also investigates Hughes’s reinvention of the georgic and elegy through examinations of farm labour and animal husbandry, through which poetic imagination memorialises the deceased farm custodian in the earth. Furthermore, this thesis examines the earth’s natural history and cultural memory to demonstrate Hughes’s eco-poetics of the Yorkshire bioregion in light of Heidegger’s notions of poetic ‘dwelling’ and in relation to the Industrial Revolution, Methodism, and experiences of war. Hughes’s environmental imagination of stones and mill ruins reveal nature as a ‘standing reserve’ and implicate natural history in human history. Finally, Hughes investigates the fluvial environment as the chief muse of poetic creativity and the dynamic ‘riverscape’ where the activity of fishing reveals human contemplation of selfhood, beyond anthropocentrism. Hughes’s poetry bears witness to an environmental consciousness which finds a language of the unknown world of external nature, as a site of ecological integrity.821University of Leedshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.689229http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/11616/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 821
spellingShingle 821
Tongsukkaeng, Chaiyon
Ecocritical reading in the poetry of Ted Hughes
description This thesis explores Ted Hughes’s poetry between the 1950s and 1980s, focusing on an emergent eco-poetics and environmental consciousness in his representations of animals, environments, and natural phenomena. Whereas Hughes’s work has been studied in terms of animals, myths, and history, reading his poetry ecocritically brings rigorous focus to refine the idea of ‘nature’ and address questions of ecological interconnectedness and environmentalism. Engaging with wilderness/wildness in nature, this thesis discusses how poetic language appeals to the unknowability of other-than-human creatures through Hughes’s fascination with creative-destructive forces. His poetry addresses issues of animal subjectivity and environmental ethics in relation to endangered species and wildlife extinction. This study also investigates Hughes’s reinvention of the georgic and elegy through examinations of farm labour and animal husbandry, through which poetic imagination memorialises the deceased farm custodian in the earth. Furthermore, this thesis examines the earth’s natural history and cultural memory to demonstrate Hughes’s eco-poetics of the Yorkshire bioregion in light of Heidegger’s notions of poetic ‘dwelling’ and in relation to the Industrial Revolution, Methodism, and experiences of war. Hughes’s environmental imagination of stones and mill ruins reveal nature as a ‘standing reserve’ and implicate natural history in human history. Finally, Hughes investigates the fluvial environment as the chief muse of poetic creativity and the dynamic ‘riverscape’ where the activity of fishing reveals human contemplation of selfhood, beyond anthropocentrism. Hughes’s poetry bears witness to an environmental consciousness which finds a language of the unknown world of external nature, as a site of ecological integrity.
author2 Becket, Fiona ; Higgins, David
author_facet Becket, Fiona ; Higgins, David
Tongsukkaeng, Chaiyon
author Tongsukkaeng, Chaiyon
author_sort Tongsukkaeng, Chaiyon
title Ecocritical reading in the poetry of Ted Hughes
title_short Ecocritical reading in the poetry of Ted Hughes
title_full Ecocritical reading in the poetry of Ted Hughes
title_fullStr Ecocritical reading in the poetry of Ted Hughes
title_full_unstemmed Ecocritical reading in the poetry of Ted Hughes
title_sort ecocritical reading in the poetry of ted hughes
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2015
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.689229
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