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Routledge Introduction to American Environmental Literature [Kõva köide]

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The Routledge Introduction to American Environmental Literature offers an overview of the different ways diverse writers in the United States have represented the nonhuman world and human relationships with it from before the nations founding to the present. Providing a concise introduction to ongoing trends and debates in literary environmentalism and the study of environmental representation, this accessible volume also covers a variety of topics, including:

the transatlantic and transnational origins of American environmental literature

the development of the American wilderness ideal in nineteenth-century literature

the American nature writing tradition

the rise of ecological science and literary responses to it

the environmental justice movement and its literary expression

climate change and the emergence of climate fiction

ecopoetry and ecopoetics

Through readings of texts by authors such as Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Mary Austin, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, Edward Abbey, N. Scott Momaday, Simon Ortiz, Wendell Berry, Annie Dillard, Terry Tempest Williams, Helena María Viramontes, Octavia Butler, Jesmyn Ward, Louise Erdrich, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Tommy Pico, and more, this book examines the relationship between literature and its historical, sociopolitical, and environmental contexts and analyzes the relationship between environment and literary form. This volume is for students studying environmental literature chiefly produced in or written about the context of the present-day United States. The text (or selected chapters from it) will be particularly useful in Literature and Environment, American Nature Writing, and Climate Writing courses offered most often in English departments.
Introduction: American Environmental Literature

Chapter 1: Early Genres of American Landscape

Chapter 2: The Wilderness Ideal: A Paradigm for American Environmental
Representation

Chapter 3: The Nature Writing Tradition

Chapter 4: The Advent of Ecology: A Second Paradigm for American
Environmental Representation

Chapter 5: Environmental Justice: A Third Paradigm for American Environmental
Representation

Chapter 6: (Anthropo)cene: A Fourth Paradigm in a Climate-Changed World

Chapter 7: Contemporary Environmental Topics in American Poetry and Prose

Conclusion
Alexander Menrisky is Associate Professor of English and affiliate faculty in American Studies at the University of Connecticut. He is the author of Everyday Ecofascism: Crisis and Consumption in American Literature and Wild Abandon: American Literature and the Identity Politics of Ecology.