The Last of the Race: The Growth of a Myth from Milton to Darwin

Voorkant
Clarendon Press, 1994 - 326 pagina's
This is an innovative and wide-ranging study of the myth of 'The Last of the Race' as it develops in a selection of literary and non-literary texts from the late seventeenth to late nineteenth centuries. The perennial fascination with the end of the world has given rise to many 'last men', from the ancient myths of Noah and Deucalion to contemporary stories of nuclear holocaust. Endangered peoples such as the Maasai or Bush People continue to attract intense interest. Fiona J. Stafford begins with Milton and ends with Darwin, exploring the myth-making of their texts in the light of contemporary literary, scientific, political, and religious views. Chapters on Milton, Burnet, Defoe, Macpherson, Cowper, Wordsworth, Byron, Mary Shelley, Fenimore Cooper, Bulwer-Lytton, and Darwin combine to form an important account of the traces of this most resonant of cultural preoccupations, providing a distinguished contribution to cultural history as well as to literary studies.

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Inhoudsopgave

List of Illustrations X
1
The First Last Man? Thomas Burnet and the Revolution
34
Robinson Crusoe as Sole Survivor
56
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Over de auteur (1994)

Fiona J. Stafford is at Somerville College, Oxford.

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