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Robert Frost and the Challenge of Darwin (Paperback, New edition)
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Robert Frost and the Challenge of Darwin (Paperback, New edition)
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"Robert Frost and the Challenge of Darwin" gives us a new and
compelling portrait of the poet-thinker as a modern
Lucretius--moved to examine the questions raised by Darwin, and
willing to challenge his readers with the emerging scientific
notions of what it meant to be human.
Combining both intellectual history and detailed analysis of
Frost's poems, Robert Faggen shows how Frost's reading of Darwin
reflected the significance of science in American culture from
Emerson and Thoreau, through James and pragmatism. He provides
fresh and provocative readings of many of Frost's shorter lyrics
and longer pastoral narratives as they illustrate the impact of
Darwinian thought on the concept of nature, with particular
exploration of man's relationship to other creatures, the
conditions of human equality and racial conflict, the impact of
gender and sexual differences, and the survival of religion.
The book shows that Frost was neither a pessimist lamenting the
uncertainties of the Darwinian worldview, nor a humanist opposing
its power. Faggen draws on Frost's unpublished notebooks to reveal
a complex thinker who willingly engaged with the difficult moral
and epistemological implications of natural science, and showed
their consonance with myths and traditions stretching back to
Milton, Lucretius, and the Old Testament. Frost emerges as a
thinker for whom poetry was not only artistic expression, but also
a forum for the trial of ideas and their impact on humanity.
"Robert Frost and the Challenge of Darwin "provides a deeper
understanding not only of Frost and modern poetry, but of the
meaning of Darwin in the modern world, the complex interrelations
of literature and science, and thehistory of American
thought.
"A forceful, appealing study of the Frost-Darwin relation, which
has gone little noted by previous scholars, and a fresh explanation
of Frost's ambivalent relation to modernism, which he scorned but
also influenced" --William Howarth, Princeton University
Robert Faggen is Associate Professor of Literature, Claremont
McKenna College and Adjunct Associate Professor, Claremont Graduate
School.
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