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Tramps, mountains and unicorns: the Glacier Park hike of Vachel Lindsay and Stephen Graham

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Tramps, mountains and unicorns: the Glacier Park hike of Vachel Lindsay and Stephen Graham. / Hughes, Michael.
In: Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, Vol. 8, No. 3, 2014, p. 267-286.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Hughes M. Tramps, mountains and unicorns: the Glacier Park hike of Vachel Lindsay and Stephen Graham. Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture. 2014;8(3):267-286.

Author

Hughes, Michael. / Tramps, mountains and unicorns : the Glacier Park hike of Vachel Lindsay and Stephen Graham. In: Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture. 2014 ; Vol. 8, No. 3. pp. 267-286.

Bibtex

@article{3bd4d96fc3174ca287db65eb3b6f7ecd,
title = "Tramps, mountains and unicorns: the Glacier Park hike of Vachel Lindsay and Stephen Graham",
abstract = "In the late summer of 1921 the British travel writer Stephen Graham and the American poet Vachel Lindsay hiked northwards through Glacier National Park. Both men had in their different literary spheres established reputations as refugees from modernity, writing books and poems that tried to articulate a vision of alternative societies in which life could be free from the materialism and corruption of western civilisation. The two men retreated to Glacier Park both to discuss their ideas and to seek a natural world where they could find a solace they could not find elsewhere. Both men wrote books about their sojourn, presenting the Park as a place where the mundane could give access to the numinous and in turn foster a remaking of the self. Their books illuminate important questions about the challenge of capturing the spiritual in the language of both poetry and prose . ",
author = "Michael Hughes",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "267--286",
journal = "Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture",
issn = "1749-4915",
publisher = "The International Society for the Study of Religion, Nature & Culture",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tramps, mountains and unicorns

T2 - the Glacier Park hike of Vachel Lindsay and Stephen Graham

AU - Hughes, Michael

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - In the late summer of 1921 the British travel writer Stephen Graham and the American poet Vachel Lindsay hiked northwards through Glacier National Park. Both men had in their different literary spheres established reputations as refugees from modernity, writing books and poems that tried to articulate a vision of alternative societies in which life could be free from the materialism and corruption of western civilisation. The two men retreated to Glacier Park both to discuss their ideas and to seek a natural world where they could find a solace they could not find elsewhere. Both men wrote books about their sojourn, presenting the Park as a place where the mundane could give access to the numinous and in turn foster a remaking of the self. Their books illuminate important questions about the challenge of capturing the spiritual in the language of both poetry and prose .

AB - In the late summer of 1921 the British travel writer Stephen Graham and the American poet Vachel Lindsay hiked northwards through Glacier National Park. Both men had in their different literary spheres established reputations as refugees from modernity, writing books and poems that tried to articulate a vision of alternative societies in which life could be free from the materialism and corruption of western civilisation. The two men retreated to Glacier Park both to discuss their ideas and to seek a natural world where they could find a solace they could not find elsewhere. Both men wrote books about their sojourn, presenting the Park as a place where the mundane could give access to the numinous and in turn foster a remaking of the self. Their books illuminate important questions about the challenge of capturing the spiritual in the language of both poetry and prose .

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

SP - 267

EP - 286

JO - Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture

JF - Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture

SN - 1749-4915

IS - 3

ER -