Synopses & Reviews
Romantic Dynamics creatively confronts Romantic poetry with a wide range of exotic concepts associated with the "new physics" of relativity and quantum to uncover their shared concerns for indeterminacy, uncertainty, relativity, and complexity in a chaotic universe. This interdisciplinary work traces the elaboration of dynamical models of cosmos and consciousness in works by Blake, Byron, Coleridge, the Shelleys, and Wordsworth, finding in those works an exploration of the interpenetration of psyche and phenomena.
Review
This is a very fine book, indeed, which makes a real contribution to our understanding of Romanticism, science, and ecological thought.
Romantic Circles Review
Synopsis
Lussier (English, Arizona State U.) calls into question the assumed tension between Romantic poetry and physical theory, arguing that the Romantics did in fact use and depend upon contemporary physical theory, including cosmology and neuroscience. He explores the work of several poets, covering topics such as Blake's "Deep Ecology", the physical dynamics of Coleridge's Rime, and temporality and memory in Byron's The Giaour.
Synopsis
Creatively collides Romantic poetry with a wide range of exotic concepts associated with the "new physics" of relativity and quantum to uncover their shared concerns for indeterminacy, uncertainty, relativity, and complexity in a chaotic universe.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 199-213) and index.
About the Author
Mark S. Lussier is Associate Professor of Literature in the Department of English at Arizona State University.
Table of Contents
Preludium: On Synchronicity * Romantic Dynamics, or Towards a Physical Criticism * Blake's Deep Ecology, or the Ethos of Otherness * At The Limit of Physical Theory, or Physical Dynamics in Coleridge's
Rime Blake's Vortex, or the Quantum Bridge in
Milton * Reconstructing Byronic Time, or Temporality and Memory in
The Giaour * The Rhythmic Universe, or Spatial Dynamics in Shelley's Poetics * Methodic Sadism/Symbolic Misogyny: Romantic Resonses to Science as Ideology