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Christoph Imscher deposited “Susan Fenimore Cooper’s Ecology of Reading” in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months agoSusan Fenimore Cooper’s slow-moving nature journal, Rural Hours (1850), is an education of the senses in which both author and reader learn where to look and how to look. Her creative decision represent herself as a “gleaner” and to both use and subtly subvert the seasonal cycle (so that we may see more deeply, more intimately, more truth…[Read more]
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Christoph Imscher deposited “Listening to Eliot’s Thrush” in the group
Poetics and Poetry on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months agoThe essay takes a fresh look at Eliot’s ‘water-dripping song’ in The Waste Land. It seems impossible for the ornithologically minded Eliot not to have known that the hermit thrush’s song does not sound like dripping water. In fact, nowhere in ornithological writing — and certainly not in his source, Chapman’s Handbook of North American Birds —…[Read more]
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Christoph Imscher deposited “Listening to Eliot’s Thrush” in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months agoThe essay takes a fresh look at Eliot’s ‘water-dripping song’ in The Waste Land. It seems impossible for the ornithologically minded Eliot not to have known that the hermit thrush’s song does not sound like dripping water. In fact, nowhere in ornithological writing — and certainly not in his source, Chapman’s Handbook of North American Birds —…[Read more]
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Christoph Imscher deposited “Susan Fenimore Cooper’s Ecology of Reading” on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months ago
Susan Fenimore Cooper’s slow-moving nature journal, Rural Hours (1850), is an education of the senses in which both author and reader learn where to look and how to look. Her creative decision represent herself as a “gleaner” and to both use and subtly subvert the seasonal cycle (so that we may see more deeply, more intimately, more truth…[Read more]
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Christoph Imscher deposited “Listening to Eliot’s Thrush” on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months ago
The essay takes a fresh look at Eliot’s ‘water-dripping song’ in The Waste Land. It seems impossible for the ornithologically minded Eliot not to have known that the hermit thrush’s song does not sound like dripping water. In fact, nowhere in ornithological writing — and certainly not in his source, Chapman’s Handbook of North American Birds —…[Read more]
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Christoph Imscher's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months ago
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Christoph Imscher changed their profile picture on Humanities Commons 8 years, 4 months ago