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Rebecca Elson's A Responsibility to Awe reissued as a Carcanet
Classic. A Responsibility to Awe is a contemporary classic, a book
of poems and reflections by a scientist for whom poetry was a
necessary aspect of research, crucial to understanding the world
and her place in it, even as, having contracted terminal cancer,
she confronted her early death. Rebecca Elson was an astronomer;
her work took her to the boundary of the visible and measurable.
`Facts are only as interesting as the possibilities they open up to
the imagination,’ she wrote. Her poems, like her researches,
build imaginative inferences and speculations, setting out from
observation, undeterred by knowing how little we can know.
The 18th century was a wealth of knowledge, exploration and rapidly
growing technology and expanding record-keeping made possible by
advances in the printing press. In its determination to preserve
the century of revolution, Gale initiated a revolution of its own:
digitization of epic proportions to preserve these invaluable works
in the largest archive of its kind. Now for the first time these
high-quality digital copies of original 18th century manuscripts
are available in print, making them highly accessible to libraries,
undergraduate students, and independent scholars.Western literary
study flows out of eighteenth-century works by Alexander Pope,
Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, Frances Burney, Denis Diderot, Johann
Gottfried Herder, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and others.
Experience the birth of the modern novel, or compare the
development of language using dictionaries and grammar discourses.
++++The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to insure edition identification:
++++British LibraryT100943'The contrast' is by Mrs. Ann Berkeley.
Edited by Sir Adam Gordon, Bart.London: printed for John Stockdale,
1791. 2v.; 12
Shortlisted for The Seamus Heaney Centre Prize This sharp and
unpredictable collection opens in the Cold War. Berkeley's father
was a V-bomber navigator, a conflicted inheritance of pride and
guilt which informs the opening poems. While parents struggle to
keep life normal, the secrecies and occluded horrors of the period
play out in vividly imagined children's games. One locus of memory
is a ruined mansion, sliced into many apartments, through which the
adult narrator looks back on the past unsure of what really
happened, only that the child did not understand. The second part
of the book develops the theme of shared humanity from the Warsaw
fishermen of the title poem to a hi-tech dystopia of the near
future, by way of a dissolute Norwegian, a traduced Baudelaire, a
contemporary woodwose, and a petrolhead on the A1M. The array of
voices - boastful, baffled, sardonic - employs Berkeley's
experience as a poetry performer with The Joy of Six. In poems that
frequently wrongfoot the reader, the Empire shrinks to an opera
audience, the Royal Family is reduced to waxworks, and Cambridge
finally gets its ecological mass transportation system. Obliquely
political, this debut collection takes a sideways look at modern
England.
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