Books by "Douglas Denon Heath"

5 books found

Romantic Ecologies and Colonial Cultures in the British Atlantic World, 1770-1850

Romantic Ecologies and Colonial Cultures in the British Atlantic World, 1770-1850

by Kevin Douglas Hutchings

2009 · McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Afro-British writer and abolitionist Ignatius Sancho railed against the abuse of domestic animals in the eighteenth-century London marketplace. Samuel Taylor Coleridge attacked the institution of slavery by writing a poem about animal rights. William Blake's allegorical depiction of American colonialism was as an act of sexual and ecological violence. By addressing these and other instances, the author highlights significant intersections between green romanticism and colonial politics, demonstrating how contemporary understandings of animality, climate, and habitat informed literary and cross-cultural debates about race, slavery, colonialism, and nature in the British Atlantic world.

The Works of Francis Bacon

The Works of Francis Bacon

by James Spedding, Robert Leslie Ellis, Douglas Denon Heath

2022 · BoD – Books on Demand

Reprint of the original, first published in 1863.

The works of Francis Bacon

The works of Francis Bacon

by Francis Bacon, James Spedding, Robert Leslie Ellis, Douglas Denon Heath, William Rawley

1861

The Iconic Imagination

The Iconic Imagination

by Douglas Hedley

2016 · Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Is it merely an accident of English etymology that 'imagination' is cognate with 'image'? Despite the iconoclasm shared to a greater or lesser extent by all Abrahamic faiths, theism tends to assert a link between beauty, goodness and truth, all of which are viewed as Divine attributes. Douglas Hedley argues that religious ideas can be presented in a sensory form, especially in aesthetic works. Drawing explicitly on a Platonic metaphysics of the image as a bearer of transcendence, The Iconic Imagination shows the singular capacity and power of images to represent the transcendent in the traditions of Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism and Islam. In opposition to cold abstraction and narrow asceticism, Hedley shows that the image furnishes a vision of the eternal through the visible and temporal.