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Article: Mountains, meaning, mediation: Petrarch’s ‘Ascent to Mont Ventoux’ (1336) and the ecological imagination of classical Chinese poetry

TitleMountains, meaning, mediation: Petrarch’s ‘Ascent to Mont Ventoux’ (1336) and the ecological imagination of classical Chinese poetry
Authors
Issue Date28-Nov-2023
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Citation
postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, 2023, v. 14, n. 4 How to Cite?
Abstract

Petrarch’s ascent of the highest mountain in Provence on April 26, 1336 CE, has been interpreted as a turning point in European environmental philosophy. For Petrarch, the allure of mountains to the human mind is a dangerous seduction as it brings him away from God, inviting a curiosity in the material world and in the self as a material object immersed in that world. In China, it was the Six Dynasties period (222–589 CE) that inaugurated a new aesthetic mode of interacting with mountain environments. Through a comparative reading, this essay suggests that the representation of phenomenological encounters with mountains in the Chinese poetic tradition offers a powerful contrastive paradigm to the Petrarchan model of eco-mimesis. These mountain-moments represent textual, highly crafted acts, a scripted re-performance of an encounter with physical nature, but they do so according to each culture’s specific understanding of the proper relation between the mind and more-than-human world.


Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/339499
ISSN
2023 Impact Factor: 0.2
2023 SCImago Journal Rankings: 0.260
ISI Accession Number ID

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorHarper, Elizabeth Kate-
dc.date.accessioned2024-03-11T10:37:08Z-
dc.date.available2024-03-11T10:37:08Z-
dc.date.issued2023-11-28-
dc.identifier.citationpostmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, 2023, v. 14, n. 4-
dc.identifier.issn2040-5960-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/339499-
dc.description.abstract<p>Petrarch’s ascent of the highest mountain in Provence on April 26, 1336 CE, has been interpreted as a turning point in European environmental philosophy. For Petrarch, the allure of mountains to the human mind is a dangerous seduction as it brings him away from God, inviting a curiosity in the material world and in the self as a material object immersed in that world. In China, it was the Six Dynasties period (222–589 CE) that inaugurated a new aesthetic mode of interacting with mountain environments. Through a comparative reading, this essay suggests that the representation of phenomenological encounters with mountains in the Chinese poetic tradition offers a powerful contrastive paradigm to the Petrarchan model of eco-mimesis. These mountain-moments represent textual, highly crafted acts, a scripted re-performance of an encounter with physical nature, but they do so according to each culture’s specific understanding of the proper relation between the mind and more-than-human world.</p>-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherPalgrave Macmillan-
dc.relation.ispartofpostmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies-
dc.titleMountains, meaning, mediation: Petrarch’s ‘Ascent to Mont Ventoux’ (1336) and the ecological imagination of classical Chinese poetry-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.identifier.doi10.1057/s41280-023-00293-z-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85177871369-
dc.identifier.volume14-
dc.identifier.issue4-
dc.identifier.eissn2040-5979-
dc.identifier.isiWOS:001109722300001-
dc.identifier.issnl2040-5960-

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