“失落世界的新知识”?

IF 0.2 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Geoffrey Reiter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在当代学术界,科学、神学和文学领域可能被划分开来,相互作用相对较少。然而,在19世纪早期,这种区分并没有那么严格。爱德华·希区柯克(Edward Hitchcock)的著作跨越了这些学科的界限,他是世界著名的地质学家,也是阿默斯特学院(Amherst College)的校长,他也接受过广泛的神学训练。现在,希区柯克因在康涅狄格河谷发现化石脚印而在古生物学家中闻名,他在1836年创作了一首名为《砂岩鸟》的诗,充分利用了自己的才华。这首诗通常为科学史家所熟知,但在美国文学的学生中却很少有人注意到它,它有效地用正式的诗句描绘了希区柯克自己的古生物学发现所召唤出来的史前世界的神学维度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“New Knowledge of Lost Worlds”?
In contemporary academic circles, the fields of science, theology, and literature may be compartmentalized with relatively little interaction. However, such distinctions were less rigid in the early nineteenth century. One of the figures whose writings stretched across these disciplinary boundaries was Edward Hitchcock, a world-renowned geologist and president of Amherst College who also had extensive theological training. Now best-known among paleontologists for his discovery of fossil footprints in the Connecticut River Valley, Hitchcock made use of his considerable talents in an 1836 poem entitled “The Sandstone Bird.” This poem—often known to historians of science but little remarked among students of American literature—effectively uses formal verse to draw out theological dimensions to the prehistoric world conjured up by Hitchcock’s own paleontological discoveries.
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