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Book Presentation by Greg Ellermann: Thought's Wilderness

  • Concordia University, Department of English 1455 Maisonneuve Blvd W, LB 681 Montreal, QC, H3G 1M8 (map)

The Centre for Expanded Poetics invites you to an online book presentation by Greg Ellermann, Lecturer at Yale University and author of Thought’s Wilderness: Romanticism and the Apprehension of Nature (Stanford University Press, 2022).

ZOOM LINK

The presentation will take place at 4:00pm on Friday, November 3, beginning with a lecture by Dr. Ellermann followed by a discussion and Q&A moderated by CEP Director Nathan Brown.

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While much recent ecocriticism has questioned the value of nature as a concept, Thought's Wilderness insists that it is analytically and politically indispensable, and that romanticism shows us why. Without a concept of nature, Greg Ellermann argues, our thinking is limited to the world that capitalism has made.

Defamiliarizing the tradition of romantic nature writing, Ellermann contends that the romantics tried to circumvent the domination of nature that is essential to modern capitalism. As he shows, poets and philosophers in the period such as Immanuel Kant, G. W. F. Hegel, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Wordsworth, and Percy Shelley were highly attuned to nature's ephemeral, ungraspable forms: clouds of vapor, a trace of ruin, deep silence, and the "world-surrounding ether." Further, he explains how nature's vanishing—its vulnerability and its flight from apprehension—became a philosophical and political problem. In response to a nascent industrial capitalism, romantic writers developed a poetics of wilderness—a poetics that is attentive to fleeting presence and that seeks to let things be. Trying to imagine what ultimately eludes capture, the romantics recognized the complicity between conceptual and economic domination, and they saw how thought itself could become a technology for control. This insight, Ellermann proposes, motivates romantic efforts to think past capitalist instrumentality and its devastation of the world.

Ultimately, this new work undertakes a fundamental rethinking of the aesthetics and politics of nature.

Earlier Event: June 15
Untimely Imagination - Zagreb