The environmental imagination does not stop short at the edge of the woods. Nor should our understanding of it, as Lawrence Buell makes powerfully clear in his new book that aims to reshape the field of literature and environmental studies. Emphasizing the influence of the physical environment on individual and collective perception, his book thus provides the theoretical underpinnings for an ecocriticism now reaching full power, and does so in remarkably clear and concrete ways. Writing for an Endangered World offers a conception of the physical environment--whether built or natural--as simultaneously found and constructed, and treats imaginative representations of it as acts of both discovery and invention. A number of the chapters develop this idea through parallel studies of figures identified with either "natural" or urban settings: John Muir and Jane Addams; Aldo Leopold and William Faulkner; Robinson Jeffers and Theodore Dreiser; Wendell Berry and Gwendolyn Brooks. Focusing on nineteenth- and twentieth-century writers, but ranging freely across national borders, his book reimagines city and country as a single complex landscape. Reviews of this book: Author of the widely influential The Environmental Imagination, Buell is a major figure in contemporary ecocriticism. Here, in broadening the scope of his earlier book, Buell blurs the usual distinction between natural and built environments. Exploring how a variety of texts imagine urban, rural, ocean, and desert places, he convincingly argues that literary imagination is powerfully shaped by--and shapes--a single, complex environment that is both found and constructed...Buell's book is important: it points ecocriticism in profoundly new and welcome directions. --W. Conlogue, Choice
... Robert E., 511 Adams, Ansel, 40 Adams, Henry, 299, 313 Adams, Raymond, 541 Adams, Stephen, 468, 469 Agassiz, Louis, 464 Agrarianism: aesthetics of relinquishment and, 158–161; as American literary tradition, 55; pastoralism and, 50, ...
And Saul Bellow said, "The country has changed so, that what I do no longer signifies anything, as it did when I was young." But to judge from this collection, writers and writing aren't done for quite yet.
DerekWalcott, Collected Poems 1948–1984 (NewYork: Farrar, Straus, 1986), 390. Citations from Patricia Ismond, Abandoning Dead Metaphors: The Caribbean Phase ofDerek Walcott's Poetry (Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press, 2001), ...
From the ancient holy alphabets of the Middle East, now used only by tiny sects, to newly created African alphabets designed to keep cultural traditions alive in the twenty-first century: from a Sudanese script based on the ownership marks ...
From National Book Award Finalist Eliot Schrefer comes the compelling tale of a girl who must save a group of bonobos -- and herself -- from a violent coup.
... through the whole organism”' (I 83)—without the worry of having unwanted children. 'Birth control', Huxley had written a few years earlier in Brave New World Revisited, 'depends on the co-operation of an entire people' (BNWR 8).
From world-renowned scientist Jane Goodall, as seen in the new National Geographic documentary Jane, comes an inspiring message about the future of the animal kingdom.
Unexceptional politics, posed against the “state of exception” foundationally inscribed in “the Political” (from Thomas Hobbes to Carl Schmitt and Hans Kelsen, from Hannah Arendt to Jacques Derrida and Giorgio Agamben), ...
... Indigenous literature are often connected and Indigenous authors write as a ... land that is taken over slowly by the US Army. Guam is a strategically ... research analyzes poetry from the poet's ongoing multivolume series titled from ...
... world of Kingsolver's fiction, it seems clear that trauma itself changes. If the assassination of Leon Trotsky marks the height of political vengeance, then the presumed death of Dellarobia Turnbow has no ... Barbara Kingsolver's World 192.