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Land and Mind: Kenneth White's Geopoetics in the Arabian Context
Hardback

Land and Mind: Kenneth White’s Geopoetics in the Arabian Context

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This book is both a study of the work of the Scottish writer, Kenneth White, in thought, travel writing and poetry, and an application of one of White’s main concepts, geopoetics, to Charles Doughty’ Arabia Deserta.

It is a largely forgotten fact that Doughty considered all his travels to be leading up to an ars poetica. Omar Bsaithi’s thesis is that Arabia Deserta is a superb example of geopoetics in action
The result of the meeting of White and Doughty orchestrated by Bsaithi is not only the reinterpretation of an English classic and perhaps a renewal of Arab studies, it is an introduction, via the writings of Kenneth White, to a regrounded field of culture. In his presentation of geopoetics and intellectual nomadism, Bsaithi draws attention both to the nature of discontent felt in the Western culture and civilization in the postmodern era, and to the possible forms of encounter between figures highly representative of the Western mind, searching for the ways out , and other cultural spaces. -Khalid
Hajji, Professor at Mohamed 1rst University, Oujda, Morocoo It is the merit of Mr Omar Bsaithi’s book to focus on a Franco-Scottish poet to establish an unprecedented correlation with Charles Doughty, author of Travels in Arabia Deserta. By so doing, he applies a method which belongs to Kenneth White’s own geopoetic practice: in a different and a priori foreign cultural context, he reveals similitudes and links through the study of a deeper and more poetic relation to terrestrial space. -Laurent Margantin, Universite de La Reunion

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Country
United Kingdom
Date
28 February 2008
Pages
205
ISBN
9781847184931

This book is both a study of the work of the Scottish writer, Kenneth White, in thought, travel writing and poetry, and an application of one of White’s main concepts, geopoetics, to Charles Doughty’ Arabia Deserta.

It is a largely forgotten fact that Doughty considered all his travels to be leading up to an ars poetica. Omar Bsaithi’s thesis is that Arabia Deserta is a superb example of geopoetics in action
The result of the meeting of White and Doughty orchestrated by Bsaithi is not only the reinterpretation of an English classic and perhaps a renewal of Arab studies, it is an introduction, via the writings of Kenneth White, to a regrounded field of culture. In his presentation of geopoetics and intellectual nomadism, Bsaithi draws attention both to the nature of discontent felt in the Western culture and civilization in the postmodern era, and to the possible forms of encounter between figures highly representative of the Western mind, searching for the ways out , and other cultural spaces. -Khalid
Hajji, Professor at Mohamed 1rst University, Oujda, Morocoo It is the merit of Mr Omar Bsaithi’s book to focus on a Franco-Scottish poet to establish an unprecedented correlation with Charles Doughty, author of Travels in Arabia Deserta. By so doing, he applies a method which belongs to Kenneth White’s own geopoetic practice: in a different and a priori foreign cultural context, he reveals similitudes and links through the study of a deeper and more poetic relation to terrestrial space. -Laurent Margantin, Universite de La Reunion

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Country
United Kingdom
Date
28 February 2008
Pages
205
ISBN
9781847184931