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El. knyga: Wanderers: Literature, Culture and the Open Road

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This book introduces the idea and experience of wandering, as reflected in cultural texts from popular songs to philosophical analysis, providing both a fascinating informal history and a necessary vantage point for understanding - in our era - the emergence of new wanderers.

Wanderers

offers a fast-paced, wide-ranging, and compelling introduction to this significant and recurrent theme in literary history. David Brown Morris argues that wandering, as a primal and recurrent human experience, is basic to the understanding of certain literary texts. In turn, certain prominent literary and cultural texts (from Paradise Lost to pop songs, from Wordsworth to the blues, from the Wandering Jew to the film Nomadland) demonstrate how representations of wandering have changed across cultures, times, and genres. Wanderers

provides an initial overview necessary to grasp the importance of wandering both as a perennial human experience and as a changing historical event, including contemporary forms such as homelessness and climate migration that make urgent claims upon us.

Wanderers

takes you on a thoroughly enjoyable and informative stroll through a significant concept that will be of interest to those studying or researching literature, cultural studies, and philosophy.



This book introduces the idea and experience of wandering, as reflected in cultural texts from popular songs to philosophical analysis, providing both a fascinating informal history and a necessary vantage point for understanding—in our era—the emergence of new wanderers.

Dont Fence Me In
2. Wanderers and Walkers
3. The Happy Wanderer
4.
Wandering as Punishment
5. Nomadlands
6. What Is Called Wandering?
7. Im
Going Nowhere
8. Nomad Thought
9. Sideward Glances
10. Mind-Wandering
11.
Romantic Wandering
12. Travelers, Tourists, and Tramps
13. Drift and Dérive
14. The Wandering Jew
15. Women Who Wander
16. Gypsy in my Soul
17. Lines,
Circles, and Boxes
18. Wordsworths Wanderers
19. The Fallen
20. Wandering
While Black
21. Accidental Wanderers
22. Wandering Eros
23. Wandering and
Wondering
24. A Migratory Species?
25. Leaving Home
26. The End of the Road
David Brown Morris is a writer-scholar, and Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Virginia, USA. He is very widely published, including two prize-winning books in eighteenth-century studies, and is internationally known for contributions in pain medicine. The Culture of Pain (1991) won a PEN prize and initiates a trilogy that includes Illness and Culture in the Postmodern Age (1997) and Eros and Illness (2017).