Cecchin, Scott Richard

Robert Bringhurst and Polyphonic Poetry: Literature as Participation in Being

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Creator (cre): Cecchin, Scott Richard, Thesis advisor (ths): Steffler, Margaret, Degree committee member (dgc): Popham, Elizabeth, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

Robert Bringhurst states that polyphonic art is a faithful, artistic reflection of the multiplicity of the world's ecosystems. This ecocritical perspective recognizes that human art informs our understandings of the world, and therefore artists have a moral obligation towards that world. In Chapter One I argue that mimesis should be reclaimed as a useful literary category since all art, regardless of intentions, has an effect on both culture and the natural world. In Chapter Two I argue that by reconnecting publishing craft and philosophy, our books can serve to bring us more in tune with the structures of the natural world. I conclude in Chapter Three by asking how a counterpublic consciousness can be cultivated, and how Bringhurst's mission of transforming culture might be fully realized. Altogether, this view of literature offers an antidote to Western culture's destructive tendencies towards the natural world.

Author Keywords: Bringhurst, ecocriticism, mimesis, poetry, polyphony, typography

2016