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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
이홍필 (전남대학교)
저널정보
한국동서비교문학학회 동서비교문학저널 동서비교문학저널 제18호
발행연도
2008.6
수록면
183 - 210 (28page)

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초록· 키워드

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Death is one of the most frequent themes both in western and oriental literary works. In western world where Christianity has been the dominant religious tenet, a number of literary works of art have dealt with death in terms of otherworldliness. For example, John Donne, the seventeen-century British poet, vividly personifies death in his poetical works; Emily Dickinson, the nineteen-century American poet, presupposes the advent of death, its weight and the life after death. Yet oriental literary writers have not paid much too their
attention to death as much as western writers. Such a tendency comes from the belief of oriental thinkers: death is a cycle of a huge stream in the universe. The Hindu followers and ancient Chinese thinkers took it for granted that death is a natural phenomenon. Considering death not as a coda of life but as a process, they did not express fear or dread toward death.
Although Walt Whitman was born into puritan society, his attitude toward death seems to come close to that of oriental thinkers. He wrote a number of poems about death from his early career of poet, interpreting death as a process of large cycle: his recognition of death as a natural phenomenon culminates in “The Sleepers.” This essay seeks to examine his works on death with special focus on “The Sleepers.”

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