Críticas:
-Xiaoshan Yang achieves a deep comparative knowledge of classical Chinese and that 'swing' period of classical to romantic in English, illuminating both traditions, and reconstructing their internal logic of poetics, philosophy, and criticism. Here is a keen awareness of the practical production of literature as it informs and is informed by theories of literature that see it acting, in Coleridge's words, as 'the mediatress between, and reconciler of, nature and man...the power of humanizing nature.'- (James Engell, Harvard University)
-Rather than generalizing from a few famous texts, Xiaoshan Yang offers a sophisticated and historically informed analysis of the theory of description in English literature, presented in conjunction with how traditional Chinese theorists posed and solved analogous problems. Rather than assuming universal categories, Dr. Yang shows us analogous processes of change, by which two historically disparate traditions become commensurate.- (Stephen Owen, Harvard University)
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Reseña del editor:
Drawing on classical Chinese poetics and English criticism from the eighteenth century to the Romantic period, this book is an intercultural study of the poetics of nature imagery. It addresses the two interrelated issues of mental perception and poetic representation of nature and pays special attention to theories of integrating natural imagery and human sentiment. By contextualizing several major premises covering a similar area of critical concern in two different traditions, it suggests the possibility of constructing a common poetics in a specifically demarcated area.
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