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Wordsworth and Railways 华兹华斯与铁路
Pub Date : 2020-06-30 DOI: 10.3828/LIVERPOOL/9781789621181.003.0002
Saeko Yoshikawa
This chapter offers a wide-ranging reappraisal of the controversy provoked by the projected Kendal and Windermere Railway in the years 1844 to 1847. It re-examines Wordsworth’s motives for entering this controversy, the support and opposition he attracted, including some poetical ripostes, what he failed to see and where he was far-sighted. Frequently criticized as selfish, class-biased discrimination against mass-tourism, or welcomed as a dawn of modern environmentalism, Wordsworth’s anti-railway sonnets and letters published in the Morning Post were in fact more complex than has been supposed, and sometimes contradictory. Far from rejecting railways and technological invention, Wordsworth predicted a glorious future for steam power in terms that were, ironically, quickly appropriated by railway promoters to further their own aims. Ranging widely beyond the Kendal and Windermere Railway, the debate allowed Wordsworth to voice his opinions on scenery, transport, self-dependence, master-employee relations, local society and economy, aesthetics and prescient environmental considerations.
本章对1844年至1847年计划修建的肯德尔和温德米尔铁路引发的争议进行了广泛的重新评估。它重新审视了华兹华斯参与这场争论的动机,他所吸引的支持和反对,包括一些诗意的反驳,他没有看到的东西和他有远见的地方。华兹华斯在《晨报》上发表的反铁路十四行诗和信件,经常被批评为对大众旅游的自私、阶级偏见的歧视,或者被视为现代环保主义的曙光,实际上比人们想象的要复杂得多,有时甚至是矛盾的。华兹华斯非但没有拒绝铁路和技术发明,反而预言了蒸汽动力的辉煌未来,讽刺的是,他的预言很快就被铁路推动者用来实现自己的目标。辩论的范围远远超出了肯德尔和温德米尔铁路,华兹华斯在风景、交通、自力更生、主人与雇员的关系、当地社会和经济、美学和有先见之明的环境考虑等方面发表了自己的观点。
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引用次数: 0
The First World War and the Lake District 一战和湖区
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.11
Saeko Yoshikawa
Chapter 5 reveals how the Great War of 1914–1918 produced a remarkable upturn in Wordsworth’s reputation, and how it had an inescapable impact on the cultural landscape of the Lake District. For obvious reasons, Wordsworth’s sonnets on liberty and independence had strong public appeal, and his sense of crisis during the war with Napoleonic France was shared by many who stood against Germany. Equally, Wordsworth’s poetry and the Lake scenery offered consolation and relief at a time of widespread tension, anxiety, and horror. When hostilities ended, Wordsworth’s association with the Lake scenery, combined with his patriotic revival during the war, produced the idea of the Lakeland mountains as a stronghold of national liberty. Twelve mountains were donated to the National Trust to be preserved as war memorials, and public free access to them were also secured.
第五章揭示了1914-1918年的世界大战如何使华兹华斯的名声显著好转,以及它如何对湖区的文化景观产生了不可避免的影响。很明显,华兹华斯关于自由和独立的十四行诗具有强烈的公众吸引力,他在与拿破仑法国的战争中感受到的危在感也被许多反对德国的人所分享。同样,华兹华斯的诗歌和湖畔风景在当时普遍存在的紧张、焦虑和恐惧中提供了安慰和解脱。战争结束后,华兹华斯与湖区风光的联系,加上他在战争期间的爱国主义复兴,产生了将湖区山脉作为民族自由堡垒的想法。十二座山被捐赠给国家信托基金作为战争纪念碑保存下来,公众也可以免费进入。
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引用次数: 0
Wordsworthian Tourism in the Interwar Period 两次世界大战期间的华兹华斯式旅游业
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.13
Saeko Yoshikawa
Chapter 7 explores how the cultural identity of the Lake District was redefined and preserved after the First World War through two trends: new global tourism, and the advent of outdoor movements. First it focuses on foreign visitors, including American and Japanese tourists, who have made no slight contribution to the re-invention of ‘Wordsworth Country’. Then it explores some of the new walkers’ guides, including those by William Thomas Palmer, Maxwell Fraser and Henry Herbert Symonds, that were particularly attuned to foot-stepping through Wordsworth’s Lake District and encouraged readers to go back to Romantic pedestrianism. The chapter also pays attention to how the hiking and cycling boom among urban working classes changed the tourist landscape in the Lake District, becoming the driving force behind conservation and access campaigns and the new National Parks movement. Taken as a whole, the chapter investigates how Wordsworth’s legacy was preserved and then rehabilitated in the interwar era of mass motoring.
第7章探讨了湖区的文化特征是如何在第一次世界大战后通过两种趋势被重新定义和保存的:新的全球旅游业和户外运动的出现。首先,它关注的是外国游客,包括美国和日本游客,他们对“华兹华斯之乡”的重新创造做出了不小的贡献。然后,它探讨了一些新的步行指南,包括威廉·托马斯·帕尔默、麦克斯韦尔·弗雷泽和亨利·赫伯特·西蒙兹的指南,这些指南特别适合步行穿过华兹华斯的湖区,并鼓励读者回到浪漫主义的步行主义。这一章还关注了城市工人阶级中徒步旅行和骑自行车的热潮如何改变了湖区的旅游景观,成为保护和进入运动以及新国家公园运动背后的推动力。作为一个整体,这一章调查了华兹华斯的遗产是如何在两次世界大战之间的大规模汽车时代得到保存和恢复的。
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引用次数: 0
Index 指数
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.16
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引用次数: 0
Epilogue: 后记:
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.14
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引用次数: 0
List of Abbreviations 缩略语一览表
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.4
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引用次数: 0
Post-War Motoring in the Lake District, the 1920s and 1930s 战后湖区的汽车,20世纪20年代和30年代
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.12
Saeko Yoshikawa
Chapter 6 explores Lake District tourism during the inter-war period, focusing on what impacts mass-motorization made on roads, tourist behaviour, local life, and the cultural value of the Lake District. The growth of charabanc and coach travel brought increasing numbers of day trips and tours from ever more distant places, creating a new battlefield for local complaints and conflicts. When a mountain electric railway from Ambleside to Keswick was proposed in 1921, many were convinced that it would be preferable to the constant streams of dust-raising charabancs. Eventually, a groundswell of opinion arose that mountain solitudes and walkers’ and cyclists’ rights should be protected from the ‘rash assault’ of unlimited road construction and queues of cars. Amid this motor-age controversy Wordsworth was once again summoned to give voice to modern discontents. Controversial plans to construct new roads over Wrynose and Hardknott Passes, and a by-pass road through Dora’s Field below Rydal Mount, were abandoned.
第6章探讨了两次世界大战期间的湖区旅游业,重点关注大规模机动化对道路、游客行为、当地生活和湖区文化价值的影响。马车和长途汽车旅游的发展带来了越来越多的一日游和来自越来越远的地方的旅游,为当地的抱怨和冲突创造了新的战场。1921年,当一条从安布尔赛德到凯瑟克的山地电气化铁路被提出时,许多人都相信,这比不断扬尘的马车要好得多。最终,人们普遍认为,山区的孤独者、步行者和骑自行车者的权利应该受到保护,不受无限制的道路建设和汽车排队的“鲁莽侵犯”。在这场汽车时代的争论中,华兹华斯再一次被召唤来表达现代人的不满。在Wrynose山口和Hardknott山口上修建新路,以及在Rydal山下修建一条穿过Dora 's Field的旁道的争议性计划被放弃了。
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引用次数: 0
Romantic Motorists, Romantic Cyclists 浪漫的驾车者,浪漫的骑车人
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.10
Saeko Yoshikawa
Chapter 4 investigates how and why the motorcar attracted George Dixon Abraham, James John Hissey and other early motorists, and explores how they adopted and adapted the poetics and aesthetics of Romantic writers, including Wordsworth and Shelley, in describing their new mobilised perceptions and bodily sensations as they hurried through changing weather and scenery, attempting inaccessible mountain passes and dizzying descents. As motor cars gradually replaced horse-drawn vehicles, and the speed of travel increased in the pre-War period, the pursuits of a more leisurely literary tourism gradually declined. At the same time, motorists were finding their own ways of enjoying the country roads, free movement and self-reliance, which was impossible for railway passengers. Likewise, intrepid bicyclists, such as Fitzwater Wray, relished their mobility and self-dependence as they toured in the Lake District in the early twentieth century. The chapter reveals how the Romantic ethos of oneness with nature, freedom of wayfaring and personal independence were revitalized in early motorists’ and cyclists’ poetics of the road.
第四章调查了汽车是如何以及为什么吸引了乔治·迪克森·亚伯拉罕、詹姆斯·约翰·希西和其他早期的驾车者,并探讨了他们是如何采用和适应浪漫主义作家的诗学和美学的,包括华兹华斯和雪莱,在描述他们在匆匆穿越变幻的天气和风景、尝试人迹罕至的山口和令人头晕目眩的下山时,他们新的动员的感知和身体感觉。随着汽车逐渐取代马车,以及战前旅行速度的提高,对更悠闲的文学旅游的追求逐渐下降。与此同时,驾车者也在寻找自己的方式来享受乡村道路、自由出行和自力更生,这对铁路乘客来说是不可能的。同样,勇敢的自行车手,如菲茨沃特·雷,在20世纪初在湖区旅行时,享受着他们的机动性和自力更生。这一章揭示了与自然合一、自由旅行和个人独立的浪漫主义精神如何在早期驾车者和骑自行车者的道路诗学中重新焕发活力。
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引用次数: 0
The Railway Controversy in Wordsworth’s Lake District 华兹华斯湖区的铁路争议
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.8
Saeko Yoshikawa
Chapter 2 explores how Wordsworth’s anti-railway arguments were variously redeployed by the Victorian conservationists, such as John Ruskin, Hardwick Drummond Rawnsley, and Gordon Wordsworth, all of whom campaigned against multiple railway projects in the Lake District. As the railway proposals became the subject of nationwide discussion, the question arose as to whose property the Lake District was, and who could claim a right to decide what to do with it: ‘stakeholders’ included local residents, farmers, aesthetic elites, and working-class tourists. Opponents of railways argued that the area’s aesthetic and literary value, and its Wordsworthian associations, were of national interest and also vital to local economic growth. Railway construction was thus debated, even by the anti-railway lobby, in terms of economics rather than what would now be termed environmental concerns. This chapter reveals how the railway controversy was an explosive mixture of aesthetics and class-struggle, democracy and populism, tourism and industrialization, commercialism, local economy and national heritage, and, lastly, an emergent environmental consciousness.
第二章探讨了华兹华斯的反铁路论点是如何被维多利亚时代的环保主义者重新利用的,比如约翰·罗斯金、哈德威克·德拉蒙德·罗恩斯利和戈登·华兹华斯,他们都反对湖区的多个铁路项目。随着铁路提案成为全国讨论的主题,湖区属于谁的财产,谁有权决定如何处理它的问题出现了:“利益相关者”包括当地居民、农民、美学精英和工薪阶层的游客。反对修建铁路的人认为,该地区的美学和文学价值,以及与华兹华斯的联系,符合国家利益,对当地经济增长也至关重要。因此,就连反对修建铁路的游说团体也从经济角度而不是从现在所谓的环境考虑角度对铁路建设进行了辩论。本章揭示了铁路争议如何成为美学与阶级斗争、民主与民粹主义、旅游与工业化、商业主义、地方经济与民族遗产,最后是新兴的环境意识的爆炸性混合物。
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引用次数: 0
The Arrival of Motorcars 汽车的到来
Pub Date : 2020-05-07 DOI: 10.2307/j.ctv11qdtt1.9
Saeko Yoshikawa
This chapter examines the earliest period of motor tourism and how the Lake District responded to the gathering motor revolution. In 1897 one of the first adventurous motorists, Henry Sturmey, successfully crossed Kirkstone Pass, and within a decade the first motor tourists began to penetrate all corners of the district. As their numbers increased so did complaints about dust, noise, fumes, speed, and the expense of building and maintaining the roads. Proposals to make a new road over remote Styhead Pass, for example, provoked disputes just as the railway projects had done, and Wordsworth was summoned to defend mountain solitudes and the rights of walkers against invading motorists. The chapter reveals how motor tourism rapidly transformed people’s awareness of the environment in which they lived and travelled, and how Wordsworthian values of natural beauty and quiet, the sense of retirement, and the recreational value of walking were increasingly drawing tourists’ attention.
本章考察了最早的汽车旅游时期,以及湖区如何应对聚集的汽车革命。1897年,第一批爱冒险的驾车者之一亨利·斯特米(Henry Sturmey)成功地穿越了柯克斯通山口(Kirkstone Pass),十年之内,第一批驾车者开始遍布该地区的各个角落。随着他们人数的增加,人们对灰尘、噪音、烟雾、速度以及修建和维护道路的费用的抱怨也越来越多。例如,在遥远的斯蒂海德山口修建新路的提议,就像铁路工程一样,引发了争议。华兹华斯被召来捍卫山区的孤独,捍卫步行者的权利,反对汽车司机的入侵。这一章揭示了汽车旅游如何迅速改变了人们对他们生活和旅行的环境的认识,以及华兹华斯对自然美和宁静、退休感和步行的娱乐价值的价值观如何越来越吸引游客的注意。
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William Wordsworth and Modern Travel
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