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Green Desire: Imagining Early Modern English Gardens
 
 
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Green Desire: Imagining Early Modern English Gardens [Hardcover]

Rebecca Bushnell (Author)

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Book Description

October 2003
For Rebecca Bushnell, English gardening books tell a fascinating tale of the human love for plants and our will to make them do as we wish. These books powerfully evoke the desires of gardeners: they show us gardeners who, like poets, imagine not just what is but what should be. In particular, the earliest English garden books, such as Thomas Hill’s The Gardeners Labyrinth or Hugh Platt’s Floraes Paradise, mix magical practices with mundane recipes even when the authors insist that they rely completely on their own experience in these matters. Like early modern "books of secrets," early gardening manuals often promise the reader power to alter the essential properties of plants: to make the gillyflower double, to change the lily’s hue, or to grow a cherry without a stone.

Green Desire describes the innovative design of the old manuals, examining how writers and printers marketed them as fiction as well as practical advice for aspiring gardeners. Along with this attention to the delights of reading, it analyzes the strange dignity and pleasure of garden labor and the division of men’s and women’s roles in creating garden art. The book ends by recounting the heated debate over how much people could do to create marvels in their own gardens. For writers and readers alike, these green desires inspired dreams of power and self-improvement, fantasies of beauty achieved without work, and hopes for order in an unpredictable world—not so different from the dreams of gardeners today.


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Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

"Reading gardening manuals in relation to early modern discourses of gender, labor, status, science, and nature, Green Desire demonstrates just how important the ‘how-to’ of growing plants was to the way people crafted their identities. Scholars and gardeners—and those who are both—will appreciate how passion, pleasure, work, and knowledge all come together in Bushnell's perceptive analysis."— Valerie Traub, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

"Green Desire addresses hot topics among scholars today: the importance of the material form of books as part of their meanings; ideologies of gender; the relationships among different classifications of knowledge; social status; and ways in which writers construct a past history. Rebecca Bushnell’s book has a particular charm created by her understated wit and quiet mastery over a body of research."—Wendy Wall, Northwestern University

About the Author

Rebecca Bushnell is Professor of English and Dean of the College, University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of A Culture of Teaching: Early Modern Humanism in Theory and Practice, Tragedies of Tyrants: Political Thought and Theater in the English Renaissance, and Prophesying Tragedy: Sign and Voice in Sophocles’ Theban Plays, all from Cornell.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
People often assume that anyone who writes about gardening must also be a great gardener, but this is not necessarily true. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Gervase Markham, Royal Society, John Parkinson, Thomas Hill, Della Porta, William Lawson, Cambridge University Press, Hugh Platt, John Evelyn, Samuel Gilbert, God Speed, Elysium Britannicum, Florist's Vade-Mecum, Francis Bacon, John Rea, The Gardeners Labyrinth, Folger Shakespeare Library, John Dixon Hunt, Michael Leslie, Stephen Blake, Thomas Sprat, University of Chicago Press, Floraes Paradise, Thomas Johnson
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