title: Creating Identity and Uniting a Nation - The Development of the Water Motif from Ancient Greek Bucolic to Early Modern English Pastoral Poetry creator: Pölzer-Nawroth, Jule subject: ddc-390 subject: 390 Customs, etiquette, folklore subject: ddc-420 subject: 420 English subject: ddc-470 subject: 470 Italic Latin subject: ddc-480 subject: 480 Hellenic languages Classical Greek subject: ddc-700 subject: 700 The arts subject: ddc-800 subject: 800 Literature and rhetoric subject: ddc-820 subject: 820 English and Old English literatures subject: ddc-870 subject: 870 Italic literatures Latin subject: ddc-880 subject: 880 Hellenic literatures Classical Greek subject: ddc-930 subject: 930 History of ancient world subject: ddc-940 subject: 940 General history of Europe description: This dissertation aims to perform an intercultural comparison of the history of ancient bucolic (Theocritus, Moschus, Bion and Virgil) and early modern pastoral poetry (e.g. Spenser, Sidney, Marlowe, Ralegh, Barnfield, Milton, Lanyer and Carew) and its influence on the development of cultural and national identity with the help of the water motif. The transience, steadiness and infinity of water has already been connected to almost every aspect of emotionality and sentimentality and offers an apparent supremacy for metaphors and allegories among the five elements. For these reasons water was chosen as a starting point of analysis and this project focuses on its usage, function and relevance in ancient Greek bucolic and early modern English pastoral poetry to demonstrate similarities and differences and to mark precisely developments in genre, form, content and context and their interpretation towards the development of a national identity. The theories used for the analysis and interpretation of the motif and its developments help to situate bucolic and pastoral poetry and its water reference in the right environmental and cultural context and involve pastoral theory, ecocriticism and the theories of collective and cultural memory as well as national identity. Since Pastoral is one of the first genres of poetry composed and printed in the English language, an interesting relationship between the British and the topic of herdsmen poetry appears to be evident. The intriguing question then arises why and how Pastoral became one of the first ‘truly English’ genres, in how far it was influenced by contemporality or ancient literary role models and what its history can offer. date: 2020 type: Dissertation type: info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis type: NonPeerReviewed format: application/pdf identifier: https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserverhttps://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/27861/1/DissertationJPN%202.pdf identifier: DOI:10.11588/heidok.00027861 identifier: urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-heidok-278616 identifier: Pölzer-Nawroth, Jule (2020) Creating Identity and Uniting a Nation - The Development of the Water Motif from Ancient Greek Bucolic to Early Modern English Pastoral Poetry. [Dissertation] relation: https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/27861/ rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess rights: http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/help/license_urhg.html language: eng