The Western Landscape in Cormac McCarthy and Wallace Stegner (Routledge Transnational Perspectives on American Literature) Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Western Landscape in Cormac McCarthy and Wallace Stegner (Routledge Transnational Perspectives on American Literature) Book

Establishes a link between the western American writers Wallace Stegner and Cormac McCarthy. This book examines the treatment of landscape and nature in their works suggesting that they exemplify perspectives which are related to their authors' historical positions before and after the cultural watershed of the Vietnam era.Read More

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  • Product Description

    The western American landscape has always had great significance in American thinking, requiring an unlikely union between frontier mythology and the reality of a fragile western environment. Additionally it has borne the burden of being a gendered space, seen by some as the traditional "virgin land" of the explorers and pioneers, subject to masculine desires, and by others as a masculine space in which the feminine is neither desired nor appreciated. Both Wallace Stegner and Cormac McCarthy focus on this landscape and environment; its spiritual, narrative, symbolic, imaginative, and ideological force is central to their work. In this study, McGilchrist shows how their various treatments of these issues relate to the social climates (pre- and post-Vietnam era) in which they were written, and how despite historical discontinuities, both Stegner and McCarthy reveal a similar unease about the effects of the myth of the frontier on American thought and life. The gendering of the landscape is revealed as indicative of the attempts to deny the failure of the myth, and to force the often numinous western landscape into parameters which will never contain it. Stegner's pre-Vietnam sensibility allows the natural world to emerge tentatively triumphant from the ruins of frontier mythology, whereas McCarthy's conclusions suggest a darker future for the West in particular and America in general. However, McGilchrist suggests that the conclusion of McCarthy's Border Trilogy, upon which her arguments regarding McCarthy are largely based, offers a gleam of hope in its final conclusion of acceptance of the feminine.

  • 0415806119
  • 9780415806114
  • Megan Riley McGilchrist
  • 10 December 2009
  • Routledge
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 264
  • 1
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