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Wild Abandon: American Literature and the Identity Politics of Ecology [Kietas viršelis]

(University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 290 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x160x20 mm, weight: 550 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Serija: Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Dec-2020
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108842569
  • ISBN-13: 9781108842563
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 290 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x160x20 mm, weight: 550 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Serija: Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Dec-2020
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108842569
  • ISBN-13: 9781108842563
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Wild Abandon serves scholars and students of American literature, environment, and postwar history. It chronicles the environmental movement's development and interaction with identity politics in the late 20th century, focusing on psychoanalysis's influence on environmentalism, and its impact on literary representations of nature and ecology.

The American wilderness narrative, which divides nature from culture, has remained remarkably persistent despite the rise of ecological science, which emphasizes interconnection between these spheres. Wild Abandon considers how ecology's interaction with radical politics of authenticity in the twentieth century has kept that narrative alive in altered form. As ecology gained political momentum in the 1960s and 1970s, many environmentalists combined it with ideas borrowed from psychoanalysis and a variety of identity-based social movements. The result was an identity politics of ecology that framed ecology itself as an authentic identity position repressed by cultural forms, including social differences and even selfhood. Through readings of texts by Edward Abbey, Simon Ortiz, Toni Morrison, Margaret Atwood, and Jon Krakauer, among others, Alexander Menrisky argues that writers have both dramatized and critiqued this tendency, in the process undermining the concept of authenticity altogether and granting insight into alternative histories of identity and environment.

Daugiau informacijos

Examines how interactions between ecology and psychoanalysis shifted the focus of the American wilderness narrative from environment to identity.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Modern Environmentalism's Identity Politics 1(26)
Ecological Authenticity and the Wilderness Narrative
4(9)
The Uses of Dissolution
13(8)
A Literary History of Environmentalist Identity Politics
21(6)
1 The Ecological Alternative: Civilization, Selfhood, and Environment in the 1960s
27(32)
Selfhood and Civilization: The New Left and Beyond
31(9)
The (In)Authentic Anarchist: The Self in Postwar Environmental Writing
40(3)
The Spontaneous Society: Ecology and the Politics of Self-Liberation
43(5)
"Feeling Like a River": Edward Abbey's Subjective Uncertainty
48(5)
Social Ecology and Psychoanalytic Vocabulary
53(2)
The Superficial Self
55(4)
2 The Entheogenic Landscape: Psychedelic Primitives, Ecological Indians, and the American Counterculture
59(36)
The Countercultural Psyche
63(4)
Peter Matthiessen's Psychedelics of Water, Wind, and Stone
67(7)
"The Hallucinogenic Oceans of the Mind" from East to West
74(7)
Psychedelic Primitivism's Presymbolic Myth
81(4)
Simon Ortiz, Oral Tradition, and Environmental Justice
85(7)
Narrative, Self, and Environment
92(3)
3 The Universal Wilderness: Race, Cultural Nationalism, and an Identity Politics for the State of Nature
95(38)
The New Universalism: Environmentalism Beyond Natural Rights
99(6)
Cultural Nationalism and Racial Authenticity
105(7)
Racial Particularity and Ecological Authenticity: A Reflective Stalemate
112(6)
Toni Morrison's Skeptical State of Nature: Race, Gender, and Wilderness
118(6)
An Admission of Fabrication
124(4)
A Brief Comment on Community and Environment
128(5)
4 The Essential Ecosystem: Reproduction, Network, and Biological Reduction
133(37)
Surfacing's Identity Crises: Gender and Nature in the 1970s
137(6)
Depth and Nature Feminism
143(5)
"The First True Human": Narcissistic Fantasy and Material Complexity
148(4)
Depth and Network
152(5)
New Materialisms, Old Narratives
157(7)
An Appeal to Obliteration
164(6)
5 The Death of the Supertramp: Psychoanalytic Narratives and American Wilderness
170(29)
Characterizing Chris McCandless
174(3)
Depth and Deep Ecology
177(4)
The Ascetic Superhero's Boast
181(4)
Into the Wild's Freudian Narrative
185(5)
Fatal Dissolutions
190(5)
The Neoliberal Wilderness
195(4)
Conclusion: Ecological Consistency 199(11)
Notes 210(18)
Bibliography 228(15)
Index 243
Alexander Menrisky is a Lecturer at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He teaches in the Department of English and Communication and the Honors College.