Relandscaping Eden: Northern European Topography as Theology in Auden’s Poems

This paper explores the contradiction Auden creates in his simultaneous description of the European North (The English and Scottish Highlands, Scotland, Iceland, and northern Norway) as an “Eden” and his awareness of the violent and pagan history of these places. It proposes that these dialectically...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brouder, Merrill
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Creative Matter 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/eng_stu_schol/64
https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1062&context=eng_stu_schol
Description
Summary:This paper explores the contradiction Auden creates in his simultaneous description of the European North (The English and Scottish Highlands, Scotland, Iceland, and northern Norway) as an “Eden” and his awareness of the violent and pagan history of these places. It proposes that these dialectically opposed visions of the European landscape can be reconciled through a synthesis rooted in Auden’s eclectic version of history—both theological and secular—and his own desire for an Eden that is informed by the spontaneity of the Homeric Arcadia, the gravity of the Christian Eden, and apophatic theology.