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E-grāmata: Reading Aridity in Western American Literature

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Deserts are highly emblematic spaces: dry, barren, isolated. In literary and cinematic representations, they often betoken collapse and dystopia. Reading Aridity in Western American Literature offer readings of literature set in the US Southwest from ecocritical and new materialist perspectives. The volume explores the diverse epistemologies, histories, relationships, futures, and possibilities that emerge from the representation of American deserts in fiction, film, and literary art. The authors, as well, trace the social, cultural, economic, and biotic narratives that foreground deserts, and how these underscore the challenges of climate change, ecojustice, and human and non-human flourishing. As such, the volume rethinks what deserts are and provides a constructive lens for seeing deserts as more than blank spaces, rather as ecogeographies that challenge, critique, and urge collective ecojustice action.
Foreword: Desertification ix
Tom Lynch
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: The Dry Time 1(18)
Jada Ach
Gary Reger
PART I ECO-IDENTITIES AND ENVIRONMENTAL BELONGING IN ARID AMERICA
19(96)
1 Imagined Deserts, Planned Communities, and Escape Pods in the American West
21(24)
Amy T. Hamilton
2 Aridity, Individualism, and Paradox in Elmer Kelton's The Time It Never Rained
45(22)
Quinn Grover
3 Desert Haunting: A Gothic Reading of Arturo Islas' The Rain God
67(20)
Cordelia Barrera
4 Imagining the Southwest in Willa Cather's Frontier Novels: Settler Colonialism in The Song of the Lark, The Professor's House, and Death Comes for the Archbishop
87(28)
Zachary R. Hernandez
PART II DESERT REMAINS: ROADS, DAMS, AND DISCARDED PIANOS
115(78)
5 Desert Roads, "Construction Men," and Infrastructural Impulses in Willa Cather's The Professor's House
117(24)
Jada Ach
6 "It was the river": Indigenous Anti-Dam Literature of the Great American Desert
141(28)
Holly Jean Richard
Paul Formisano
7 The Desert as Dumping Ground in Popular Imagination
169(24)
Jennifer Dawes
PART III ENVISIONING THE DESERT FROM OUTSIDE THE WEST
193(80)
8 Trinitite, Turquoise, and Rattlesnakes: Envisioning the (De)Nuclearized Desert in the Works of Leslie Marmon Silko and Kyoko Hayashi
195(28)
Kyoko Matsunaga
9 Color, Place, and Memory in Silko's Gardens in the Dunes
223(20)
Celina Osuna
10 French Travelers in the Arid Southwest
243(30)
Gary Reger
Conclusion: Desert Dwelling 273(6)
Ron Broglio
Index 279(14)
About the Contributors 293
Jada Ach is a lecturer for the leadership and integrative studies program at Arizona State University.

Gary Reger is Hobart professor of classical languages at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut.