"So often characterized as a poet of modernity, W. H. Auden emerges from Ladislav Vít’s study as a figure intimately informed by older continuities, irradiated by the long nineteenth century. Vít reads the poetry through the seemingly niche ideas of place and landscape, deftly showing how the poet’s positions and imaginative maneuvers are instructive for our broader understanding of his work; and because Auden is so significant, this has broader consequences for how we understand the period." Justin Quinn, University of West Bohemia
"Landscapes dominate much of Auden’s poetry. They have traditionally been read biographically and symbolically. None of this is wrong. Yet there is greater potential in these non-human protagonists of Auden’s writings. Ladislav Vit’s study grants landscape discursive power and views Auden’s topographies as forms of poetic landguage that help shape the complex messages of Auden’s poems and their discussions of a sense of place especially in the challenging interwar years." Rainer Emig, author of W.H. Auden: Towards a Postmodern Poetics
"This is a work of extraordinary range, subtlety, and depth. It combines sophisticated modern critical method with sympathetic attention to linguistic, biographical, and historical detail to provide a deep and illuminating reading of the landscapes of Auden's poetry, life, and memory. Readers with a lifelong interest in Auden's landscapes will find new discoveries in this book, and any reader interested in what can be accomplished through learning and sophistication will find new models for reading." Edward Mendelson, Columbia University
Introduction
1 The Map of Auden’s Mythical Geography
2 My ‘Great Good Place’ in the Pennines
3 ‘My Tutrix’: England in Auden’s Poetry
4 My Dream Exile on an Island with a Halo
5 Roots, Routes and Landscapes
Ladislav Vít studied at Charles University, Prague, and now works at the University of Pardubice, Czech Republic. His research interests lie with British interwar writing, literary topography and the poetics of place. His major focus is on W. H. Auden’s spatial responsiveness from the perspective of cultural and humanistic geography. His publications include ‘Landscape as a Benchmark: Poetics of Place as a Critical Tool in W. H. Auden’s Prose’ (2018), ‘Poetry and Place in Auden’s Letters from Iceland’ (2016) and ‘Feet on the Ground: Landscape in Auden’s Late Poetry’ (2014). He is the co-founder and executive editor of the scholarly journal American and British Studies Annual, published since 2008.