Green World

For other uses, see Green World (disambiguation).

Green World is a literary concept defined by critic Northrop Frye in The Anatomy of Criticism.[1] In some comedies by William Shakespeare, the main characters escape the order of a city for a forested and wild setting adjacent to the city. This natural environment is often described as a green world. It is in this more loosely structured, fantastic environment that issues surrounding social order, romantic relationships, and inter-generational strife, which are a prominent part of the "city world", become resolved, facilitating a return to the normal order. Recent literary critics drawn to ecocriticism have occasionally found the concept valuable to their work as well.

See also

References

  1. The Anatomy of Criticism (Princeton; Princeton University press, 1957), pp. 182–4


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