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El. knyga: Culture, Environment and Ecopolitics

Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: 290 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2020
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781527551329
  • Formatas: 290 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2020
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781527551329

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Culture, Environment and Ecopolitics brings together a series of new reflections on historical and current ecological and environmental predicaments. By way of critical interventions in environmental thought, and through engagements with literary, visual, architectural, philosophical, and more general cultural studies scholarship, this collection of essays by an international panel of writers breaks new interpretative ground. While techno-science has in some quarters been elevated to a master discourse of humanity's salvation, charged with providing a magical 'fix' for planetary ecological dilemmas, the focus of our volume is on the importance of cultural reflection for bringing matters of local and global import to light. Moving from the abstractions of eco-critical utopianisms to the concrete identity of the land in the poetry of John Clare, from British Petroleum's attempts to re-brand climate change to examples of eco-architecture, and much more besides, these essays exemplify ways in which eco-political thought and practice might now be theorized. The collection is framed by a substantial editors' introduction which offers but one contextualization of the ideas and critical trajectories that follow. Culture, Environment and Ecopolitics will allow readers to discover original intersections and argumentative cross-references across contested terrains in a world increasingly troubled by ecological crises.
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction Culture, Environment and Ecopolitics 1(31)
Nick Heffernan
David A. Wragg
Chapter One Environmentalism, Art and Agency
32(23)
Malcolm Miles
Chapter Two Lost Edens and Other Green Worlds: Ecotopia, Politics and Aesthetics
55(29)
Lisa Garforth
Chapter Three The Place of Catastrophe: Mike Davis, Clarence King and the Politics of Contingency
84(27)
John Beck
Chapter Four "I Cannot Heave My Heart Into My Mouth": Stephen Jay Gould and Ecocriticism
111(26)
Heidi Scott
Chapter Five Room to Speak? A Green Voice for Romanticism in John Clare's "Swordy Well"
137(19)
Anthony Howell
Chapter Six Thinking Like a Reef: Postcolonial Ecocriticism as a Green Reading Practice
156(21)
Hans-Georg Erney
Chapter Seven Terodacktyl Apocalypse: Writing Catastrophe in Mahasweta Devi's Pterodactyl, Puran Sahay, and Pirtha
177(23)
Ben Conisbee Baer
Chapter Eight Where Has All the Oil Gone? BP Branding and the Discursive Elimination of Climate Change
200(26)
Julie Doyle
Chapter Nine "Fitting Buildings": Ecological Architecture, Place and Ethics
226(29)
Peter Kraftl
Chapter Ten Ecopolitical Action on the Desert of the Real, or, What's James Benning's Cinema Got to Do with It?
255(23)
Isabelle Freda
Contributors 278(3)
Index 281
Nick Heffernan teaches American Studies at the University of Nottingham. He is the author of Capital, Class and Technology in Contemporary American Culture: Projecting Post-Fordism (Pluto Press, 2000).David A. Wragg was Senior Lecturer in English, History of Art and Media at the University of Northampton before retiring in 2007. He has published across disciplines, including work on Wyndham Lewis, Frank Zappa and Abstraction Expressionism. He currently writes and records a lot of music, and designs long distance walks.