"Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry

Scholars studying memory, literary tourism, and Byron all note the cooperation between author and audience at work in memorials--be it in terms of speech and response, hospitality and reception, or memory and forgetting. None, however, address the environment at Newstead as an agentic being involved...

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Main Author: Wintch, Taylore Ann
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/9574
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/etd/article/10583/viewcontent/4632857222575820200801_etd.pdf
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spelling ftbrighamyoung:oai:scholarsarchive.byu.edu:etd-10583 2023-07-23T04:20:25+02:00 "Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry Wintch, Taylore Ann 2022-06-17T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/9574 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/etd/article/10583/viewcontent/4632857222575820200801_etd.pdf unknown BYU ScholarsArchive https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/9574 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/etd/article/10583/viewcontent/4632857222575820200801_etd.pdf https://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ Theses and Dissertations Lord Byron posthumous reception Newstead Abbey memorial ecology literary tourism multispecies agency performativity Arts and Humanities text 2022 ftbrighamyoung 2023-07-03T22:51:19Z Scholars studying memory, literary tourism, and Byron all note the cooperation between author and audience at work in memorials--be it in terms of speech and response, hospitality and reception, or memory and forgetting. None, however, address the environment at Newstead as an agentic being involved with Byron's memorial legacy. Byron acknowledged multispecies beings as important actors in his eventual legacy. Through some of his early poems, we see the land under and around Newstead Abbey, as well as its nonhuman life, exercising agency and affecting Byron's memory. I limit my analysis to Byron's early poetry partly to trace how a younger, more earnest Byron relied on Romantic memory-building culture and partly to focus on the effects that Newstead had on Byron's legacy. My primary objects of study are the following poems: "On Leaving Newstead Abbey" (composed 1803), "To an Oak in the Garden of Newstead Abbey" (1807), "Elegy on Newstead Abbey" (1807), and "Inscription on the Monument of a Newfoundland Dog" (1808). Each of these addresses the Byrons' ancestral estate as an ecology which Byron imbued with poetic purpose, and the core location of his youthful legacy-building project. I address the poems in chronological order to show how Byron recruits and unites different voices to support his legacy. Focusing on Newstead in this sense sheds light on any number of related phenomena pertaining to Byronism, especially monuments, Byron's home, and other aspects of material culture that honored Byron's posthumous legacy. Given that, within years of writing these four poems, Byron would become known worldwide as the quintessential Romantic poet, his ancestral home, like other things and spaces that came to stand in for him, offers a highly useful and arguably paradigmatic case study. That it is not just a monument, but a composite being acting in and made up of literal and memorial ecosystems, suggests a kind of memorial agency or voice emerging from Newstead. This influence supports what Byron poetically speaks about ... Text Newfoundland Brigham Young University (BYU): ScholarsArchive The Monument ENVELOPE(162.250,162.250,-72.583,-72.583)
institution Open Polar
collection Brigham Young University (BYU): ScholarsArchive
op_collection_id ftbrighamyoung
language unknown
topic Lord Byron
posthumous reception
Newstead Abbey
memorial ecology
literary tourism
multispecies agency
performativity
Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle Lord Byron
posthumous reception
Newstead Abbey
memorial ecology
literary tourism
multispecies agency
performativity
Arts and Humanities
Wintch, Taylore Ann
"Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry
topic_facet Lord Byron
posthumous reception
Newstead Abbey
memorial ecology
literary tourism
multispecies agency
performativity
Arts and Humanities
description Scholars studying memory, literary tourism, and Byron all note the cooperation between author and audience at work in memorials--be it in terms of speech and response, hospitality and reception, or memory and forgetting. None, however, address the environment at Newstead as an agentic being involved with Byron's memorial legacy. Byron acknowledged multispecies beings as important actors in his eventual legacy. Through some of his early poems, we see the land under and around Newstead Abbey, as well as its nonhuman life, exercising agency and affecting Byron's memory. I limit my analysis to Byron's early poetry partly to trace how a younger, more earnest Byron relied on Romantic memory-building culture and partly to focus on the effects that Newstead had on Byron's legacy. My primary objects of study are the following poems: "On Leaving Newstead Abbey" (composed 1803), "To an Oak in the Garden of Newstead Abbey" (1807), "Elegy on Newstead Abbey" (1807), and "Inscription on the Monument of a Newfoundland Dog" (1808). Each of these addresses the Byrons' ancestral estate as an ecology which Byron imbued with poetic purpose, and the core location of his youthful legacy-building project. I address the poems in chronological order to show how Byron recruits and unites different voices to support his legacy. Focusing on Newstead in this sense sheds light on any number of related phenomena pertaining to Byronism, especially monuments, Byron's home, and other aspects of material culture that honored Byron's posthumous legacy. Given that, within years of writing these four poems, Byron would become known worldwide as the quintessential Romantic poet, his ancestral home, like other things and spaces that came to stand in for him, offers a highly useful and arguably paradigmatic case study. That it is not just a monument, but a composite being acting in and made up of literal and memorial ecosystems, suggests a kind of memorial agency or voice emerging from Newstead. This influence supports what Byron poetically speaks about ...
format Text
author Wintch, Taylore Ann
author_facet Wintch, Taylore Ann
author_sort Wintch, Taylore Ann
title "Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry
title_short "Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry
title_full "Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry
title_fullStr "Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry
title_full_unstemmed "Newstead and I stand or fall together": Memorial Ecology and Multispecies Agency in Byron's Early Poetry
title_sort "newstead and i stand or fall together": memorial ecology and multispecies agency in byron's early poetry
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2022
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/9574
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/etd/article/10583/viewcontent/4632857222575820200801_etd.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.250,162.250,-72.583,-72.583)
geographic The Monument
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genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_source Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/9574
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/etd/article/10583/viewcontent/4632857222575820200801_etd.pdf
op_rights https://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/
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