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| 005 | 20250317111611.0 | ||
| 008 | 250312042017GB eng | ||
| 020 | _a9781351934978 | ||
| 037 |
_bTaylor & Francis _cGBP 52.99 _fBB |
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| 041 | _aeng | ||
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| 100 | 1 | _aShelley Saguaro | |
| 245 | 1 | 0 |
_aGarden Plots _bThe Politics and Poetics of Gardens |
| 250 | _a1 | ||
| 260 |
_aOxford _bRoutledge _c20170515 |
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| 300 | _a264 p | ||
| 520 | _bShelley Saguaro's unique book illustrates the persistent presence of gardens in literature. Gardens in fiction do not simply represent a familiar theme, Saguaro contends, but are bound up with wider aesthetic and ideological issues. As with literary forms, so too are gardens subject to transformations. Encompassing a wide array of twentieth- and twenty-first century authors, including Virginia Woolf, Eudora Welty, Carol Shields, J. M. Coetzee, Toni Morrison, Leslie Marmon Silko, Jamaica Kincaid, Don DeLillo, and Philip K. Dick, this book's preoccupations are signalled in the evocatively titled chapters: Botanical Modernisms; Natural History and Postmodern Grafting; Postcolonial Landscapes; How Does Your Cyber Garden Grow?; and Coevolutionary Histories - the Poetics of a Paradox. Informed by postcolonial, formalist, feminist, and psychoanalytic theories, Garden Plots is a must read for all those alive to the space gardens inhabit in the literary landscape. | ||
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