美国诗人西莉亚·塞克斯特的鸟类学激情

Ellen M. Taylor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国诗人西莉亚·雷顿·塞克斯特(Celia Leighton Thaxter, 1835 - 1894)在新英格兰社区目睹的环境之美和破坏影响了她。作为一个在一个被风吹拂的小岛上度过了一生的女人,她受到了季节和迁徙的影响,这些影响后来影响了她的工作。在波士顿文学精英的短暂教育开启了她的创作生涯,在那里她专注于当地的生态。当时,过度狩猎和新流行的羽毛帽子和配饰造成了鸟类大量灭绝的严重可能性。通过让人们意识到人类对鸟类濒危的责任,Thaxter的工作引起了公众的同情,并为社会和政治变革做出了贡献。本文将生态女权主义和文化分析应用于塞克斯特作为19世纪鸟类保护运动的一部分所写的作品,通过研究她关于鸟类的诗歌和散文中所使用的情感修辞和隐含的激进主义,特别是:“三趾鸥”,“受伤的杓鹬”和“大蓝鹭:警告”。很少有人注意到塞克斯特的说教诗,这些诗以鸟类为主题,教导儿童和成人鸟类的脆弱性,并警告人类的破坏性行为。这些作品展示了塞克斯特的生态敏感性,以及她运用情感和理性来传达生态信息。她关于鸟类的诗歌和散文巩固了萌芽中的奥杜邦协会,并为环境运动的诞生做出了贡献。我们可以从这种诗意的行动主义中学习,从对自然转化为商品的关注中学习,从耗尽有限资源的危险中学习。在我们的全球环境危机中,我们认识到鸟类和人类之间相互交织的关系。也许诗歌可以帮助阻止我们当前的生态轨迹。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ornithological Passions of American Poet Celia Thaxter
       American poet Celia Leighton Thaxter (1835 – 1894) was shaped by both environmental beauty and destruction she witnessed in her New England community. As a woman who spent much of her life on a small wind-swept island, she was educated by seasons and migrations that later informed her work. A brief education among Boston’s literary elite launched her creative career, where she focused on her local ecology. At that time, over-hunting and newly fashionable plumed hats and accessories had created a serious possibility of avian decimation. By creating awareness of humans’ culpability for birds’ endangerment, Thaxter’s work evoked public sympathy and contributed to social and political change.       This essay applies ecofeminist and cultural analyses to Thaxter’s work written as part of the 19th century bird defense movement, by examining the emotional rhetoric employed and activism implied in her poems and prose about birds, specifically: “The Kittiwakes,” “The Wounded Curlew,” and “The Great Blue Heron: A Warning.”  Little attention has been paid to Thaxter’s didactic poems which use birds as subjects to instruct children and adults about the fragility of birdlife and to warn of humans’ destructive behaviors. These works illustrate Thaxter’s ecological sensibility and her use of emotion and reason to communicate an ecological message. Her poetry and prose about birdlife fortified the budding Audubon Society and contributed to the birth of the environmental movement. We can learn from such poetic activism, from attention to nature turned commodity, and the dangers of depleting finite resources. In our global environmental crisis, we recognize the interwoven relationships between birds and humans. Perhaps poems can help stymie our current ecological trajectory.
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