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El. knyga: Christian Environmentalism and Human Responsibility in the 21st Century: Questions of Stewardship and Accountability

Edited by (University of Windsor, Canada)

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This book comprises scholarly essays and creative works exploring the implications of Christian environmentalism through literary and cultural criticism. For scholars, researchers and upper-level students interested in the relationship between religion and environment, ethics, animal welfare, poetry, and post-secularism.



Christian Environmentalism and Human Responsibility in the 21st Century comprises original scholarly essays and creative works exploring the implications of Christian environmentalism through literary and cultural criticism and creative reflection.

The volume draws on a flourishing recent body of Christian ecocriticism and environmental activity, incorporating both practical ethics and environmental spirituality, but with particular emphasis on the notion of human responsibility. It discusses responsibility in its dual sense, as both the recognized cause of environmental destruction and the ethical imperative of accountability to the nonhuman environment. The book crosses boundaries between traditional scholarly and creative reflection through a global range of topics: African oral tradition, Ohio artists off the grid, immigrant self-metaphors of land and sea, iconic writers from Milton to O’Connor to Atwood, and Indigenous Canadian models for listening to the nonhuman Mother of us all. In its incorporation of academic and creative pieces from scholars and creative artists across North America, this volume shows how environmental work of its nature and necessity crosses traditional academic and community boundaries. In both form and orientation, this collection speaks to the most urgent intellectual, physical, social, and spiritual needs of the present day.

This book will appeal to scholars, researchers, and upper-level students interested in the relationship between religion and environment, ethics, animal welfare, poetry, memoir, and post-secularism.

1. Introduction: Christian Environmentalism and Human Responsibility
2.
The Practice of Lavishing Attention
3. An Ecocritical Reading of Jesus of the
Deep Forest
4. Waves and Refugees: Water Metaphors and Epistemological
Humility in Thi Buis The Best We Could Do
5. Poems John Terpstra (I)
6.
Outrage from lifeless things: Theodicy and the Anthropogenic Effects of the
Fall in Paradise Lost
7. Early Modern Reformed Theology and Nonhuman Animals
8. Bandits
9. Paragon of Animals: An Afterword to Bandits
10. From Grass to
Galaxy: Alice Meynells Poetic Wayfaring in the Meshwork of the World
11.
Flannery OConnors Integral Ecology
12. Can you make this all run again?
The Art and Environmentalism of Margo and Rein Vanderhill
13. Environments of
Grace: Reflections on Sacramental Reality in the Work of Bruce Cockburn and
David Adams Richards
14. Poems by John Terpstra (II)
15. Birding, Fiction,
and Margaret Atwoods Cultivation of Ecological Awareness
16. I just cant
get enough of this place: The Gifts and Complications of John Terpstras
Love of Hamilton
17. Can We Hear What the Land Is Saying? The Haudenosaunee
Two Row Wampum and Via Negativa as Postures for Listening
18. To Dwell
Ecologically: The Practice of Re-enchantment
Katherine M. Quinsey is Professor Emerita in the English Department at the University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada.