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This paper will examine the process by which Gary Snyder (1930-) reached his view that "the wild" part of all beings is the root source of language. First, the definition of wilderness and the term "t...he wild" recognized by Snyder will be examined. The insight of Snyder is richly steeped in a thick soup of philosophy, anthropology and linguistics, including such writers as Merleau-Ponty and Lévi-Strauss, but many of his ideas are similar to those of Thoreau. In conclusion, his belief is that only through maintaining a close connection to that which is the wildest part of ourselves, and our world, can we truly continue to grow and thrive as an intellectual species. This coexistence of all living and nonliving entities is Snyder’s hope and solution for the future.続きを見る
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Introduction ; Chapter I. Gary Snyder(1930-) and The Practice of the Wild ; Chapter II. Snyder's understanding of the Wild ; Chapter III. Snyder's View on Language ; Chapter IV. Snyder's View on Myth ; Conclusion
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