Impetuous torrents: Scottish waterfalls in travellers' narratives, 1769-1830
dc.contributor.advisor
Withers, Charles
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dc.contributor.author
Cole, Edward
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dc.date.accessioned
2011-08-18T16:17:15Z
dc.date.available
2011-08-18T16:17:15Z
dc.date.issued
2011-11-24
dc.description.abstract
This dissertation examines the waterfall in travellers’ accounts and guidebooks of Scotland between 1769 and 1830. Waterfalls have been generally neglected in studies of the cultural and aesthetic significance of landscape, and despite their popularity in Scotland, few commentators have attempted a discussion or explanation of them.
Yet waterfalls, I argue, were ideally suited to the main aesthetic categories devoted to natural features in this period, the sublime and the picturesque. With reference to these categories – the sublime disclosing sentiments of awe, even of terror; the picturesque, detached contemplation – I discuss waterfalls as static object, and as dynamic process. The waterfall is arguably the pre-eminent picturesque landform. At the same time, it reveals the limitations of the picturesque way of viewing the world, perhaps more acutely than any other landform. The waterfall is inescapably dynamic, and thus repudiates the static mode of representation inherent in the picturesque. The vitality implied by the waterfall as a site of agency and process, and its sound, also brings with it the idea of the waterfall symbolising life, a feature which was particularly important in the often bleak surroundings of the Scottish Highlands.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5197
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
Waterfalls
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dc.subject
Sublime
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dc.subject
Picturesque
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dc.subject
Scotland
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dc.subject
MSc Environment, Culture and Society
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dc.title
Impetuous torrents: Scottish waterfalls in travellers' narratives, 1769-1830
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Masters
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dc.type.qualificationname
MSc Master of Science
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dcterms.accessRights
RESTRICTED ACCESS
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