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Unfolding Irish landscapes offers a comprehensive and sustained cross-disciplinary study of the work of cartographer, landscape writer and visual artist Tim Robinson. Robinson's work continues to garner significant attention not only in Ireland, but also in the United Kingdom, Europe and North America, particularly with the recent celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of his monumental Stones of Aran: pilgrimage.
In The Guardian, Robert Macfarlane has described Robinson's work in Ireland as 'one of the most sustained, intensive and imaginative studies of a landscape that has ever been carried out'. It is difficult to separate Robinson the figure from his work and the places he surveys in Ireland - they are intertextual and interconnected. This volume explores some of these characteristics for both general and expert readers alike.
The multi-genre essays and visual texts of this collection explore Robinson's writing, map-making and art. The individual studies demonstrate disciplinary expertise; as parts of a cohesive project they form a collective overview of the imaginative sensibility and artistic dexterity of Robinson's cultural and geographical achievements in Ireland. By navigating Robinson's method of ambulation through his prose and visual creations this book examines topics ranging from the politics of cartography and map-making as visual art forms to the cultural and environmental dimensions of writing about landscapes.
The collection draws from the expertise of international scholars in fields of Irish studies, geography, environmental studies, literature and visual culture, with contributors including Patrick Duffy, John Elder, Moya Cannon, Gerry Smyth and Moynagh Sullivan. Unfolding Irish landscapes will be an essential companion not only for students and lecturers in Irish studies and environmental humanities but also for the general reader seeking a deeper understanding of Ireland's geography and culture.
In The Guardian, Robert Macfarlane has described Robinson's work in Ireland as 'one of the most sustained, intensive and imaginative studies of a landscape that has ever been carried out'. It is difficult to separate Robinson the figure from his work and the places he surveys in Ireland - they are intertextual and interconnected. This volume explores some of these characteristics for both general and expert readers alike.
The multi-genre essays and visual texts of this collection explore Robinson's writing, map-making and art. The individual studies demonstrate disciplinary expertise; as parts of a cohesive project they form a collective overview of the imaginative sensibility and artistic dexterity of Robinson's cultural and geographical achievements in Ireland. By navigating Robinson's method of ambulation through his prose and visual creations this book examines topics ranging from the politics of cartography and map-making as visual art forms to the cultural and environmental dimensions of writing about landscapes.
The collection draws from the expertise of international scholars in fields of Irish studies, geography, environmental studies, literature and visual culture, with contributors including Patrick Duffy, John Elder, Moya Cannon, Gerry Smyth and Moynagh Sullivan. Unfolding Irish landscapes will be an essential companion not only for students and lecturers in Irish studies and environmental humanities but also for the general reader seeking a deeper understanding of Ireland's geography and culture.
Unfolding Irish landscapes offers a comprehensive and sustained cross-disciplinary study of the work of cartographer, landscape writer and visual artist Tim Robinson. Robinson's work continues to garner significant attention not only in Ireland, but also in the United Kingdom, Europe and North America, particularly with the recent celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of his monumental Stones of Aran: pilgrimage.
In The Guardian, Robert Macfarlane has described Robinson's work in Ireland as 'one of the most sustained, intensive and imaginative studies of a landscape that has ever been carried out'. It is difficult to separate Robinson the figure from his work and the places he surveys in Ireland - they are intertextual and interconnected. This volume explores some of these characteristics for both general and expert readers alike.
The multi-genre essays and visual texts of this collection explore Robinson's writing, map-making and art. The individual studies demonstrate disciplinary expertise; as parts of a cohesive project they form a collective overview of the imaginative sensibility and artistic dexterity of Robinson's cultural and geographical achievements in Ireland. By navigating Robinson's method of ambulation through his prose and visual creations this book examines topics ranging from the politics of cartography and map-making as visual art forms to the cultural and environmental dimensions of writing about landscapes.
The collection draws from the expertise of international scholars in fields of Irish studies, geography, environmental studies, literature and visual culture, with contributors including Patrick Duffy, John Elder, Moya Cannon, Gerry Smyth and Moynagh Sullivan. Unfolding Irish landscapes will be an essential companion not only for students and lecturers in Irish studies and environmental humanities but also for the general reader seeking a deeper understanding of Ireland's geography and culture.
In The Guardian, Robert Macfarlane has described Robinson's work in Ireland as 'one of the most sustained, intensive and imaginative studies of a landscape that has ever been carried out'. It is difficult to separate Robinson the figure from his work and the places he surveys in Ireland - they are intertextual and interconnected. This volume explores some of these characteristics for both general and expert readers alike.
The multi-genre essays and visual texts of this collection explore Robinson's writing, map-making and art. The individual studies demonstrate disciplinary expertise; as parts of a cohesive project they form a collective overview of the imaginative sensibility and artistic dexterity of Robinson's cultural and geographical achievements in Ireland. By navigating Robinson's method of ambulation through his prose and visual creations this book examines topics ranging from the politics of cartography and map-making as visual art forms to the cultural and environmental dimensions of writing about landscapes.
The collection draws from the expertise of international scholars in fields of Irish studies, geography, environmental studies, literature and visual culture, with contributors including Patrick Duffy, John Elder, Moya Cannon, Gerry Smyth and Moynagh Sullivan. Unfolding Irish landscapes will be an essential companion not only for students and lecturers in Irish studies and environmental humanities but also for the general reader seeking a deeper understanding of Ireland's geography and culture.
Über den Autor
Derek Gladwin is SSHRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of British Columbia
Christine Cusick is an Associate Professor of English at Seton Hill University
Christine Cusick is an Associate Professor of English at Seton Hill University
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword - Robert Macfarlane
Introduction: Ireland's 'ABC of earth wonders' - Christine Cusick and Derek Gladwin
Part 1: Explorations in cartography and geography
1. Genius loci: the geographical imagination of Tim Robinson - Patrick Duffy
2. Catchments - John Elder
3. 'The fineness of things': the deep mapping projects of Tim Robinson's art and writings, 1969-1972 - Nessa Cronin
4. Documentary map-making and film-making in Pat Collins' Tim Robinson: Connemara - Derek Gladwin
Part 2: Topographic writing and narrative
5. 'And now intellect, discovering its own effects': Tim Robinson as narrative scholar - Christine Cusick
6. Not-knowing as aesthetic imperative in Tim Robinson's Stones of Aran - Kelly Sullivan
7. Thirteen ways of looking at a landscape: the poetic in the work of Tim Robinson - Moya Cannon
8. Tim Robinson and Chris Arthur: in defence of the Irish essay - Karen Babine
Part 3: Place and the Irish cultural imagination
9. 'But his study is out of doors': Tim Robinson's place in Irish studies - Eamonn Wall
10. Maps, movements, and migrants: reading Tim Robinson though Gluaiseacht Chearta Sibhialta na Gaeltachta - Jerry White
11. 'About nothing, about everything': listening in / to Tim Robinson - Gerry Smyth
12. 'another half-humanized boulder lying on unprofitable ground': the visual art of Tim Robinson/Timothy Drever - Catherine Marshall
13. 'An ear to the earth': matrixial gazing in Tim Robinson's walk-art-text practice - Moynagh Sullivan
14. Essayist of place: postcolonialism and ecology in the work of Tim Robinson - Eóin Flannery
Epilogue: On the rocks road - Andrew McNeillie
Bibliography
Index
Introduction: Ireland's 'ABC of earth wonders' - Christine Cusick and Derek Gladwin
Part 1: Explorations in cartography and geography
1. Genius loci: the geographical imagination of Tim Robinson - Patrick Duffy
2. Catchments - John Elder
3. 'The fineness of things': the deep mapping projects of Tim Robinson's art and writings, 1969-1972 - Nessa Cronin
4. Documentary map-making and film-making in Pat Collins' Tim Robinson: Connemara - Derek Gladwin
Part 2: Topographic writing and narrative
5. 'And now intellect, discovering its own effects': Tim Robinson as narrative scholar - Christine Cusick
6. Not-knowing as aesthetic imperative in Tim Robinson's Stones of Aran - Kelly Sullivan
7. Thirteen ways of looking at a landscape: the poetic in the work of Tim Robinson - Moya Cannon
8. Tim Robinson and Chris Arthur: in defence of the Irish essay - Karen Babine
Part 3: Place and the Irish cultural imagination
9. 'But his study is out of doors': Tim Robinson's place in Irish studies - Eamonn Wall
10. Maps, movements, and migrants: reading Tim Robinson though Gluaiseacht Chearta Sibhialta na Gaeltachta - Jerry White
11. 'About nothing, about everything': listening in / to Tim Robinson - Gerry Smyth
12. 'another half-humanized boulder lying on unprofitable ground': the visual art of Tim Robinson/Timothy Drever - Catherine Marshall
13. 'An ear to the earth': matrixial gazing in Tim Robinson's walk-art-text practice - Moynagh Sullivan
14. Essayist of place: postcolonialism and ecology in the work of Tim Robinson - Eóin Flannery
Epilogue: On the rocks road - Andrew McNeillie
Bibliography
Index
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2016 |
---|---|
Genre: | Importe, Lyrik & Dramatik |
Rubrik: | Belletristik |
Medium: | Buch |
Inhalt: | Gebunden |
ISBN-13: | 9781784992781 |
ISBN-10: | 178499278X |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Einband: | Gebunden |
Redaktion: |
Gladwin, Derek
Cusick, Christine |
Hersteller: | Manchester University Press |
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: | Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de |
Maße: | 240 x 161 x 20 mm |
Von/Mit: | Derek Gladwin (u. a.) |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 01.01.2016 |
Gewicht: | 0,584 kg |