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    Title: 水際的沈思:伊莉莎白・畢夏的環境想像
    Musing at the Water`s Edge: Elizabeth Bishop`s Environmental Imagination
    Authors: 陳梓芳
    Chen, Tzu-Fang
    Contributors: 施堂模
    Sellari, Thomas
    陳梓芳
    Chen, Tzu-Fang
    Keywords: 伊莉莎白・畢夏
    生態詩
    旅行
    Elizabeth Bishop
    ecopoetry
    travel
    Date: 2023
    Issue Date: 2023-08-02 14:01:27 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: 在畢夏的詩作中,自然、環境、地理與旅行一直是重要主題。本文旨在探討畢夏如何思索人與自然的關係,並指出畢夏詩中對於環境的關懷。詩人以「水際」作為人類文明到自然環境的過度場域,其對水岸的刻畫除了展現人與非人間的緊密共存外,也揭示了人在觀察與再現自然時的限制。畢夏並不試圖突破此限制,而是承認其存在,並以詩的語言作為重新審視自然的媒介。畢夏的環境關懷詩學體現科學觀察如何與美學體驗結合,進而提升人的環境意識。
    本文第一章探討生態詩學如何為環境問題作出有效貢獻,以及畢夏的生態思想如何形塑她的詩作。第二章探討畢夏如何透過「水際」此域限空間處理人再現自然的限制,以及如水般順應與流動的思維方式如何化限制為省思。最末章探討畢夏的旅行與旅居經驗,總結出畢夏透過旅行,傳達自然作為人的居所與人旅居自然的現況。畢夏的生態詩學展現了富流動性的處世與思考方式,此反應自然、隨自然變化的模式使自然在其筆下更為鮮明。
    This thesis aims to examine how Bishop mediates between man and nature, and argues that her poetry is environmentally conscious and understands the significance of human and nonhuman coexistence. The water’s edge appears as a poetic setting where Bishop shifts her concerns from civilized territory to nature’s domain. Her nature-oriented poetics demonstrate how scientific observations and aesthetic experience enriches each other, and thereby elevates man’s environmental awareness. Bishop delivers her concerns not by criticism or advocacy, but by demonstrating the sense of mobility that nature gives.
    The first chapter defines ecopoetry, and investigates how Bishop`s ecocentric belief shapes her ways of perception and description. The following chapter examines how Bishop positions herself between land and water, and how this liminal space contributes to her strategy of dealing with the limitations of human perception of nature, as well as the promises of an adaptive consciousness. The last chapter probes into Bishop’s Brazil poems and sees her travel experience as an active reflection and readjustment of the man-nature relationship. Bishop’s natural imagery—empirical, impersonal, and restrained—aims to reduce human presumption and intention towards nature. Her ecological concerns lie in acknowledging the confrontations between man and nature, freeing nature from man’s utilitarianism, and challenging man to see nature in a new light by breaking preconceptions and reestablishing associations through poetic artifice.
    Reference: Anderson, Linda. “The Story of the Eye: Elizabeth Bishop and the Limits of the Visual.” Elizabeth Bishop: Poet of the Periphery, 2002. pp. 159-174.
    Bate, Jonathan. Romantic Ecology: Wordsworth and the Environmental Tradition. Routledge, 1991.
    -----. The Song of the Earth. Library of America, 2008. pp.283
    Baudelaire, Charles. Flowers of Evil & Artificial Paradise. Solar, 2008. pp.21.
    Bernstein, Charles. Close Listening: Poetry and the Performed World. New York: Oxford UP, 1998.
    Bishop, Elizabeth. Poems. Chatto & Windus, 2011.
    -----. Elizabeth Bishop: Poems, Prose, and Letters. Library of America, 2008.
    -----. One Art: Letters. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1995. pp.154.
    Blake, William. “Auguries of Innocence.” Blake`s Poetry and Designs. New York: Norton, 1979. pp.209.
    Bloom, Harold, ed. And intro. Modern Critical Views: Elizabeth Bishop. New York: Chelsea House, 1985.
    Buell, Lawrence. The Environmental Imagination: Thoreau, Nature Writing, and the Formation of American Culture. Harvard UP, 2001. pp.7-8.
    -----. “Representing the Environment.” The Green Studies Reader: from Romanticism to Ecocriticism. Routledge, 2000. pp.177-181.
    Costello, Bonnie. Elizabeth Bishop: Questions of Mastery. Harvard UP, 1993.
    -----. Shifting Ground: Reinventing Landscape in Modern American Poetry. Harvard UP, 2003. pp.1-18.
    Coupe, Laurence. The Green Studies Reader: from Romanticism to Ecocriticism. Routledge, 2000. pp.26.
    Cresswell, Tim. “Elizabeth Bishop in and out of Place: a topopoetic approach” The Routledge Handbook of Literature and Space: Robert T. Tally Jr, editor, edited by Robert T. Tally. Abingdon, Oxon; Routledge, 2017. pp.114-24.
    David W. Gilcrest, Greening the Lyre: Environmental Poetics and Ethics, Nevada UP, 2002. pp.3-4.

    Diehl, Joanne. “Bishop’s Sexual Poetics.” Elizabeth Bishop: The Geography of Gender, edited by Marilyn May Lombardi. UP of Virginia, 1993. pp.17-45.
    Fisher-Wirth Ann W and Laura-Gray Street. The Ecopoetry Anthology. Trinity UP. 2013. pp. xxviii.
    Garrad, Greg, ed. Teaching Ecocriticism and Green Cultural Studies. London Palgrave, 2012. pp.233-45.
    Gilford, Terry. “The Social Construction of Nature.” The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology, edited by Cheryll Glotfelty and Harold Fromm. U of Georgia P, 1996. pp.173-176.
    Gordon B. Jan. “Days and Distances: The Cartographic Imagination of Elizabeth Bishop.” Modern Critical Views: Elizabeth Bishop, edited by Bloom, Harold, Chelsea House, 1985. pp.9-19.
    Hochman, Jhan. “Green Cultural Studies.” The Green Studies Reader: from Romanticism to Ecocriticism. Routledge, 2000. pp.187-92.
    Hollister, Susannah L. “Elizabeth Bishop’s Geographic Feeling.” Twentieth Century Literature, vol.58, no.3, 2012. pp.399-438.
    Howarth, William. “Some Principles of Ecocriticism.” The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology, edited by Cheryll Glotfelty and Harold Fromm. U of Georgia P, 1996. pp.69-91.
    Hicok, Bethany. “Becoming a Poet: From North to South.” The Cambridge Companion to Elizabeth Bishop. Edited by Cleghorn, Angus and Jonathan Ellis. Cambridge UP, 2014. pp. 111-23.
    Johnson, Alexandra. “Geography of the Imagination.” Christian Science Monitor, 23 March 1978, pp.23-25.
    Kalstone, David. “Questions of Memory, Questions of Travel.” Modern Critical Views: Elizabeth Bishop, edited by Bloom, Harold, Chelsea House, 1985. pp.51-74.
    -----. “All Eye,” Partisan Review 38, No.2. 1950. pp.312.
    Kern, Robert. “Fabricating Ecocentric Discourse in the American Poem (and Eleswhere).” New Literary Theory. No.37. 2006. pp.425-45.
    Knickerbocker, Scott. Ecopoetics: The Language of Nature, the Nature of Language. Amherst: U of Massachusetts P, 2012. pp.1-18, 56-83.
    Krasner, James. The Entangled Eye: Visual Perception and the Representation of Nature in Post-Darwinian Narrative. Oxford UP, 1992. pp.5

    Markoski, Blagoja. Basic Principles of Topography. Springer International Publishing, 2018.
    Mazzaro, Jerome. “The Poetics of Impediment.” Modern Critical Views: Elizabeth Bishop, edited by Bloom, Harold, Chelsea House, 1985. pp.23-49.
    McKendrick, Jamie. “Bishop’s Birds.” Elizabeth Bishop: Poet of the Periphery, 2002. pp. 123-142.
    Morton, Timothy. Ecology Without Nature: Rethinking Environmental Aesthetics. Harvard UP, 2009.
    Pascal, Blaise. Pascal’s Pensées. Project Gutenberg, 2006, https://www.gutenberg.org/files/18269. pp.39-43.
    Phillips, Dana. The Truth of Ecology: Nature, Culture, Literature in America. Oxford UP, 2003. pp.41.
    Rotella, Guy L. Reading and Writing Nature: The Poetry of Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, and Elizabeth Bishop. Northeastern UP, 1990. pp.187-228.
    Rueckery, William. “Literature and Ecology: An Experiment in Ecocriticism.” The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology, edited by Cheryll Glotfelty and Harold Fromm. U of Georgia P, 1996. pp.112.
    Stevenson, Anne. “The Geographical Mirror.” Elizabeth Bishop: Poet of the Periphery, 2002. pp. 31-41.
    Soper, Kate. “The Idea of Nature.” The Green Studies Reader: from Romanticism to Ecocriticism. Routledge, 2000. pp. 123-26.
    Travisano, Thomas J. Elizabeth Bishop: Her Artistic Development. UP of Virginia, 1988. pp.3-14, 108.
    Vendler, Helen. “Domestication, Domesticity and the Otherworldly.” Modern Critical Views: Elizabeth Bishop, edited by Bloom, Harold, Chelsea House, 1985. pp.83-96.
    Wenthe, William. “‘The World’ Is Too Much with Us.” Yale Review 95.2 (2007). pp.116-30.
    Description: 碩士
    國立政治大學
    英國語文學系
    110551001
    Source URI: http://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/record/#G0110551001
    Data Type: thesis
    Appears in Collections:[Department of English] Theses

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