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El. knyga: Ecocritical Concerns and the Australian Continent

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Ecocritical Concerns and the Australian Continent investigates literary, historical, anthropological, and linguistic perspectives in connection with activist engagements. The necessary cross-fertilization between these different perspectives throughout this volume emerges in the resonances between essays exploring recurring concerns ranging from biodiversity and preservation policies to the devastating effects of the mining industries, to present concerns and futuristic visions of the effects of climate change. Of central concern in all of these contexts is the impact of settler colonialism and an increasing turn to indigenous knowledge systems. A number of chapters engage with questions of ecological imperialism in relation to specific sociohistorical moments and effects, probing early colonial encounters between settlers and indigenous people, or rereading specific forms of colonial literature. Other essays take issue with past and present constructions of indigeneity in different contexts, as well as with indigenous resistance against such ascriptions, while the importance of an understanding of indigenous notions of care for country is taken up from a variety of different disciplinary angles in terms of interconnectedness, anchoredness, living country, and living heritage. 
List of Figures and Tables
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(14)
Beate Neumeier
PART I POLITICS OF THE LAND AND INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE
15(42)
1 The Museumesque in Pristine Wilderness
17(10)
Alexis Wright
2 The Smooth Space of the Nomads: Indigenous Outopia, Indigenous Heterotopia and the Example of Australia
27(16)
Norbert Finzsch
3 From Reverence to Rampage: Care for Country versus Ruthless Exploitation
43(14)
Catherine Laudine
PART II COLONIAL LEGACIES AND CURRENT ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS
57(50)
4 Australian Conservation Policies and the Owls of Lord Howe Island
59(16)
Helen Tiffin
5 Biological Colonization in the Land of Flowers
75(16)
Anna Haebich
6 Moving Trees and Trading Melons: Reconstructing Local Knowledge and Settler Practices in 1840s South Australia
91(16)
Eva Bischoff
PART III ECOCRITICISM AND FIELDWORK
107(54)
7 Ecologies of the Otherwise: Glimpses of Australia after the Resources Boom
109(14)
Carsten Wergin
8 On The Beaten Track: Ambiguous Wilderness in the Tourist Space of Indigenous Australia
123(16)
Anke Tonnaer
9 Yan-nharju Language of the Crocodile Islands: Anchoredness, Kin, and Country
139(22)
Bentley James
Melanie Briick
Dany Adone
PART IV ECOCRITICAL APPROACHES TO COLONIAL ART
161(56)
10 Reconstructing Representations: "Australia" as Ecocritical Andragogy
163(28)
C.A. Cranston
11 Killing and Sentiment in the Colonial Australian Kangaroo Hunt Narrative
191(12)
Ken Gelder
Rachael Weaver
12 Marriage, Mining, and Environmental Destruction in Nineteenth-century Fiction about Australia
203(14)
Philip Mead
PART V ECOCRITICAL CONCERNS ACROSS CONTEMPORARY ARTS: INDIGENOUS VOICES IN FICTION, POETRY AND PERFORMING ARTS
217(46)
13 Performing the Anthropocene: Marrugeku's Cut the Sky
219(16)
Helen Gilbert
14 Corporate Interest and the Power of Mines in Indigenous Writing and Film: Alexis Wright's Carpentaria (2006) and Ivan Sen's Goldstone (2016)
235(16)
Victoria Herche
David Kern
15 Defying the "Ecological Indian": The Urban Ecopoetry of Samuel Wagan Watson
251(12)
Katrin Althans
PART VI CODA--CROSSING BOUNDARIES
263(16)
16 Australia's Great Barrier Reef: Two Personal Accounts
265(14)
Sandra Williams
Helen Tiffin
Index 279(14)
About the Contributors 293
Beate Neumeier is professor of English literature at the University of Koln in Germany.

Helen Tiffin is adjunct professor of post-colonial and animal studies at the University of New England, Australia.