1. The Multiplication of Centers 2. The Horizon Line 3. The Spatial Urge 4. The Invention of Place 5. The Measured Mastery of the World
Springer Book Archives
Bertrand Westphal is a Professor of General and Comparative
Literature at the Université de Limoges, France where he directs
the "Espaces Humains et Interactions Culturelles" research team. He
is the author of Geocriticism: Real and Fictional Spaces, as well
as numerous works on geocriticism, Austrian literature, the
Mediterranean, and the theory of the novel.
Amy Wells is an Associate Professor of English in the Applied
Foreign Languages Department at the Cherbourg Satellite of the
Université de Caen de Basse Normandie, France. She is a member of
the research team Equipe de recherche interdisciplinaire sur la
Grande-Bretagne, l'Irlande et l'Amérique du nord [Interdisciplinary
research team on Great Britain, Ireland, and North America]
(ERIBIA), and she has published numerous articles on geocriticism
and literary cartography including 'The Intertextual,
Sexually-Coded Rue Jacob.'
"Admirably learned and wide-ranging in its exempla, Westphal's geocritical study de-centers and redraws the most cherished mappings of Occidental modernity, opening up place and space to postmodern incursions. Its chronotopic richness and theoretical adventurousness will repay careful scrutiny by contemporary cartographers of past, plural, and plausible worlds." - David H.J. Larmour, Paul Whitfield Horn Professor of Classics, Texas Tech University, USA, and author of The Sites of Rome: Time, Space, Memory "A vast rhizomatic and immensely learned romp through the literary spaces of the last three thousand years. Wells's translation of Westphal's The Plausible World will put geocriticism firmly on the map." - Paul Allen Miller, Carolina Distinguished Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature, University of South Carolina, USA "The Plausible World digs deep into the archives of the literary and cartographic arts in order to show how maps are shaped by stories. In so doing, it takes us on a sometimes meandering, often playful, and always gripping voyage through the spatial history of the world, emphasizing mankind's fiction-fueled quest to know (and master) the smooth New Worlds that seem always to beckon to us from just beyond the horizon of that striated center we call home." - Eric Prieto, Professor of French, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA, and author of Literature, Geography, and the Postmodern Poetics of Place
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