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The New German Nature Lyric

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The New German Nature Lyric. / Thomas, Nicola.
In: Humanities, Vol. 9, No. 2, 50, 04.06.2020.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Thomas N. The New German Nature Lyric. Humanities. 2020 Jun 4;9(2):50. doi: 10.3390/h9020050

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Thomas, Nicola. / The New German Nature Lyric. In: Humanities. 2020 ; Vol. 9, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{0c39d3c556cb4b5c87b1c9cda2d264ac,
title = "The New German Nature Lyric",
abstract = "Naturlyrik has long been a contested category in German poetry, but however politically suspect some may find {\textquoteleft}Gespr{\"a}ch(e) {\"u}ber B{\"a}ume{\textquoteright} (Brecht), they are vitally important in the era of anthropogenic environmental collapse. The current generation of German-language poets have sought new ways of writing about the natural world and environments; these differ from, and draw on, pre-twentieth-century Naturlyrik as well as the complex, often critical, representations of nature in poetry after the Second World War. Representations of gardens and other human-{\textquoteleft}managed{\textquoteright} natural spaces, references to and rewritings of German literary tradition, and the exploration of non-human voices and subjects all serve as means of restoring subjective fullness and complexity to Naturlyrik. The questions of voice and form which are central to the idea of the lyric genre as a whole are implicated in the development of a contemporary nature poetry beyond both Brecht and Benn, and Anthropocene Naturlyrik is pushing German lyric poetry itself into a new phase.",
keywords = "ecocriticism; nature poetry; Naturlyrik; Yoko Tawada; Jan Wagner; Ulrike Draesner; Silke Scheuermann; lyric subject",
author = "Nicola Thomas",
year = "2020",
month = jun,
day = "4",
doi = "10.3390/h9020050",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Humanities",
publisher = "MDPI",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The New German Nature Lyric

AU - Thomas, Nicola

PY - 2020/6/4

Y1 - 2020/6/4

N2 - Naturlyrik has long been a contested category in German poetry, but however politically suspect some may find ‘Gespräch(e) über Bäume’ (Brecht), they are vitally important in the era of anthropogenic environmental collapse. The current generation of German-language poets have sought new ways of writing about the natural world and environments; these differ from, and draw on, pre-twentieth-century Naturlyrik as well as the complex, often critical, representations of nature in poetry after the Second World War. Representations of gardens and other human-‘managed’ natural spaces, references to and rewritings of German literary tradition, and the exploration of non-human voices and subjects all serve as means of restoring subjective fullness and complexity to Naturlyrik. The questions of voice and form which are central to the idea of the lyric genre as a whole are implicated in the development of a contemporary nature poetry beyond both Brecht and Benn, and Anthropocene Naturlyrik is pushing German lyric poetry itself into a new phase.

AB - Naturlyrik has long been a contested category in German poetry, but however politically suspect some may find ‘Gespräch(e) über Bäume’ (Brecht), they are vitally important in the era of anthropogenic environmental collapse. The current generation of German-language poets have sought new ways of writing about the natural world and environments; these differ from, and draw on, pre-twentieth-century Naturlyrik as well as the complex, often critical, representations of nature in poetry after the Second World War. Representations of gardens and other human-‘managed’ natural spaces, references to and rewritings of German literary tradition, and the exploration of non-human voices and subjects all serve as means of restoring subjective fullness and complexity to Naturlyrik. The questions of voice and form which are central to the idea of the lyric genre as a whole are implicated in the development of a contemporary nature poetry beyond both Brecht and Benn, and Anthropocene Naturlyrik is pushing German lyric poetry itself into a new phase.

KW - ecocriticism; nature poetry; Naturlyrik; Yoko Tawada; Jan Wagner; Ulrike Draesner; Silke Scheuermann; lyric subject

U2 - 10.3390/h9020050

DO - 10.3390/h9020050

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

JO - Humanities

JF - Humanities

IS - 2

M1 - 50

ER -