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This book assembles lectures and essays on literature (William Wordsworth, Walter Benjamin, Chinese mountain poetry, Friedrich Nietzsche, the Tao Te Ching ), art (Paleolithic cave art, Vincent Van Gogh, American landscape painting), and Japanese poetry forms (haiku, haibun, tanka) that were originally presented and published between 2000 and 2007. The essays identify strategies to counter the so-called postmodern condition. Matters of will, ethics, and consciousness are examined in comparative contexts with the aim of formulizing models of enlightened states of being and their aesthetic…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book assembles lectures and essays on literature (William Wordsworth, Walter Benjamin, Chinese mountain poetry, Friedrich Nietzsche, the Tao Te Ching ), art (Paleolithic cave art, Vincent Van Gogh, American landscape painting), and Japanese poetry forms (haiku, haibun, tanka) that were originally presented and published between 2000 and 2007. The essays identify strategies to counter the so-called postmodern condition. Matters of will, ethics, and consciousness are examined in comparative contexts with the aim of formulizing models of enlightened states of being and their aesthetic expressions. This study focuses on Wordsworth's rainbow epiphany; Walter Benjamin's "aura" and "monad"; Chinese mountain poetry's cosmic emptiness; Nietzsche's Hyperborean; Paleolithic cave art's transpersonal expression; Van Gogh's "dizzy heights" of natural beauty; American landscape painters' depiction of the sublime; haiku's absolute metaphor epiphany; and tanka's connection between natural beauty and erotic feeling. The collection is a re-examination of Ralph Waldo Emerson's "fundamental unity" between humanity and nature, as well as an examination of often-unmediated affective experience and its expression in this context through literature and art.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Bruce Ross received his Ph.D. in English from the University of Buffalo, New York. He is the author of The Inheritance of Animal Symbols in Modern Literature and World Culture (Peter Lang, 1988) and If Not Higher: Lectures on the Poetics of Spiritual Presence and Absence (Peter Lang, 1999). He is editor of Haiku Moment: An Anthology of Contemporary North American Haiku (1993) and Journey to the Interior: American Versions of Haibun (1998). He has written four collections of haiku, most recently summer drizzle...haiku and haibun (2005) and is also the author of How to Haiku: A Writer's Guide to Haiku and Related Forms (2002).