Reading early Wordsworth through Adorno, this article suggests that Romantic walking entails the subjugation of external objects through the exercise of an imperial and elevated perception. It then considers Dorothy Wordsworth’s influence over her brother and the possibility that a Romantic ‘eco-poetic’ emerges from the ‘feminine’ perspective below the mountain, and within the domestic landscape. I argue that this gesture away from walking and mountaineering as the demonstration of physical prowess, or as the pursuit of a real or ideal goal, is taken up by three contemporary women poets of landscape. Harriet Tarlo, Frances Presley and Helen Macdonald offer different ways of walking, which dispense with goal-orientation, explore the ethical ...
[[abstract]] As one of the major poets in British Romantic period, Wordsworth is an important figur...
With reference to Wordsworth's suggestion that the 'love of nature' leads to the 'love of man', thi...
Walking in the countryside is an increasingly popular pursuit in Britain. Much previous research wit...
Reading early Wordsworth through Adorno, this article suggests that Romantic walking entails the sub...
Narratives attached to walking practices, influenced by the Romantic, Naturalist and avant-garde mov...
The article will address the cultural history of walking, and it will critically discuss the creativ...
Wordsworthian poetry is a poetry of movement, and William Wordsworth, who begins his most well-known...
Dorothy Wordsworth was a nineteenth century British writer (1771-1855), who\ud wrote throughout most...
This article explores four literary encounters with the Solway Firth in the Romantic period. It draw...
Ecocritical theory investigates the relationship between human activities and the natural world, par...
This special issue comes out of Traversing the Field: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Walking in ...
This dissertation seeks to explain the ideological resonance of the pedestrian metaphor informing Wo...
This is a jointly authored practice-led article by a poet and artist who have produced place-based ...
Women Who Walk is a new network for women who use walking in their creative or academic practice. Th...
The article explores ecofeminism as intersectional, founded upon a politics of relations. Through an...
[[abstract]] As one of the major poets in British Romantic period, Wordsworth is an important figur...
With reference to Wordsworth's suggestion that the 'love of nature' leads to the 'love of man', thi...
Walking in the countryside is an increasingly popular pursuit in Britain. Much previous research wit...
Reading early Wordsworth through Adorno, this article suggests that Romantic walking entails the sub...
Narratives attached to walking practices, influenced by the Romantic, Naturalist and avant-garde mov...
The article will address the cultural history of walking, and it will critically discuss the creativ...
Wordsworthian poetry is a poetry of movement, and William Wordsworth, who begins his most well-known...
Dorothy Wordsworth was a nineteenth century British writer (1771-1855), who\ud wrote throughout most...
This article explores four literary encounters with the Solway Firth in the Romantic period. It draw...
Ecocritical theory investigates the relationship between human activities and the natural world, par...
This special issue comes out of Traversing the Field: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Walking in ...
This dissertation seeks to explain the ideological resonance of the pedestrian metaphor informing Wo...
This is a jointly authored practice-led article by a poet and artist who have produced place-based ...
Women Who Walk is a new network for women who use walking in their creative or academic practice. Th...
The article explores ecofeminism as intersectional, founded upon a politics of relations. Through an...
[[abstract]] As one of the major poets in British Romantic period, Wordsworth is an important figur...
With reference to Wordsworth's suggestion that the 'love of nature' leads to the 'love of man', thi...
Walking in the countryside is an increasingly popular pursuit in Britain. Much previous research wit...