Cyclicity in Landscape: Its Reality in Nature and Clash with Human Civilizational Progress

dc.contributor.advisorAbrams, Robert
dc.contributor.authorNguyen, Hannah
dc.date.accessioned2019-06-27T17:29:11Z
dc.date.available2019-06-27T17:29:11Z
dc.date.issued3/19/2019
dc.description.abstractSeeking to understand how landscape’s dualities serve as the basis for its inherently natural cyclicity in Henry David Thoreau’s Cape Cod brings us to a clearer recognition of its odds with the American ideal of unidirectional progression. The natural landscape’s discontinuous cyclicity and its connection to human civilization’s cyclical theory of history lead us to a discussion of its conceptual clash with Manifest Destiny and American exceptionalism. Thomas Cole’s Course of Empire paintings show how the landscape’s natural cycle is linked to the rise and fall of human civilizations built atop it. This paper, through analysis of Thoreau and Cole’s works, will examine how the environmental landscape’s natural cycle is irrevocably linked to that of human civilization. In doing so, we enter a more detailed discussion of how natural cyclicity in the landscape serves as a source of American fear of disruption to their nation’s ongoing progress.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1773/43806
dc.languageEnglish
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherUniversity of Washington Libraries
dc.relation.ispartofseries2019 Libraries Undergraduate Research Award Winners
dc.titleCyclicity in Landscape: Its Reality in Nature and Clash with Human Civilizational Progress
dc.typeUpper division, Non- Thesis

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