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Poetry and Landscape

This title is no longer available from the Roland Collection. Details remain on this site for the reference of previous customers.

Professor John Barrell of Sussex University looks at eighteenth-century landscape paintings and poetry which describes landscapes, in the context of their social and political background. He argues that landscape was seen as a metaphor for society, providing either a justification for, or a critique of, the established order. The program falls into four parts:

1
The organization of eighteenth-century landscape painting to look like theatre sets and a comparison with equivalent techniques in poetry

2
The political significance of such a procedure, related to the different layers of society

3
The contrast in paintings between formalized landscape gardens and `natural' landscape and its significance as a metaphor for degrees of freedom

4
The layering of society represented in rural poetry and in visual representations of rural life.












Availability:
This title is no longer available from the Roland Collection
Additional information
Order number: 336A






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Credits Director
Robert Philip

Presenter
Professor John Barrell

Open University/BBC
 
25 minutes
Color
Recommended audience age range 18-adult



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