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E-grāmata: Conrad and Nature: Essays [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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Conrad and Nature is the first collection of critical essays examining nature and the environment in Joseph Conrad’s writings. Together, these essays by established and emerging scholars reveal both the crucial importance of nature in Conrad’s work, and the vital, ongoing relevance of Conrad’s treatment of the environment in our era of globalization and climate change. No richer subject matter for an environmentally-engaged criticism can be found than the Conradian contexts and themes under investigation in this volume: island cultures, colonial occupations, storms at sea, mining and extraction, inconstant weather, ecological collapse, and human communities competing for resources. The 17 essays collected here —13 new essays, and 4 excerpts from classic works of Conradian scholarship -- consolidate some of the most important voices and perspectives on Conrad’s relation to the natural world, and open new avenues for Conradian and environmental scholarship in the 21st century.

1 Conrad, Nature and Environmental Criticism
1(18)
Lissa Schneider-Rebozo
Jeffrey Mathes McCarthy
PART I Conrad and the Anthropocene
19(72)
2 Wilderness after Nature: Conrad, Empire and the Anthropocene
21(22)
Jesse Oak Taylor
3 Conrad in the Anthropocene: Steps to an Ecology of Catastrophe
43(25)
Nidesh Lawtoo
4 The Monstrous and the Secure: Reading Conrad in the Anthropocene
68(23)
Robert P. Marzec
PART II Conrad's Atmospherics
91(80)
5 Dirty Weather
93(20)
Troy Boone
6 The "Breaking-Up of the Monsoon and Lord Jim's Atmospherics
113(33)
Brendan Kavanagh
7 Conrad's Ecological Performativity: The Scenography of "Nature" from An Outcast of the Islands to Lord Jim
146(25)
Mark Deggan
PART III Conrad, Ethics and Ecology
171(62)
8 Conrad and Nature, 1900-1904
173(23)
Hugh Epstein
9 "A Paradise of Snakes": Conrad's Ecological Ambivalence
196(15)
J.A. Bernstein
10 "What Could His Object Be?" Form and Materiality in Conrad's "The Tale"
211(22)
Jarica Linn Watts
PART IV Nature, Empire and Commerce
233(54)
11 Nostromo and World-Ecology
235(17)
Jay Parker
12 "He Can't Throw Any of His Coal-Dust in My Eyes": Adventurers and Entrepreneurs in Victory's Coal Empire
252(17)
Samuel Perks
13 Guano, Globalization and Ecosystem Change in Lord Jim
269(18)
Mark D. Larabee
PART V Earlier Commentary
287(32)
14 From The Challenge of Bewilderment
289(3)
Paul Armstrong
15 "Too Beautiful Altogether": Ideologies of Gender and Empire in Heart of Darkness
292(7)
Johanna M. Smith
16 From "Beyond Mastery: The Future of Conrad's Beginnings"
299(12)
Geoffrey Galt Harpham
17 The World of Nature
311(8)
Ian Watt
Notes on Contributors 319(4)
Index 323
Lissa Schneider-Rebozo is Professor of English and Director of Undergraduate Research at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls.





Jeffrey Mathes McCarthy is the Director of Environmental Humanities at the University of Utah.





John G. Peters is University Distinguished Research Professor at the University of North Texas, is past President of the Joseph Conrad Society of America and current General Editor of Conradiana.