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E-grāmata: Reimagining Environmental History: Ecological Memory in the Wake of Landscape Change

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University of Nevada Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780874176049
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University of Nevada Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780874176049

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"Christian Knoeller presents a radical reinterpretation of environmental history set in the heartland of America. In an excellent model of narrative-based scholarship, this book dynamically reimagines American environmentalism across generations of writers, artists, and scientists. Knoeller starts out with Audubon, and cites Thoreau's journals in the 1850s as he assesses an early 17th century account of New England's natural resources by William Wood, showing the epic decline in game and bird populationsin Concord. This reading of environmental history is replicated throughout with a gallery of novelists, poets, essayists, and other commentators as they explore ecological memory and environmental destruction. In apt discussions of Matthiessen, Lopez, Wendell Berry, William Stafford and many others, Knoeller offers vibrant insights into literary history. He also cites his own memoir of perpetual development on his family's farm in Indiana, enriching the scholarship and making an urgent plea for the healing aesthetics of the imagination. Reading across centuries and genres, Knoeller gives us a vibrant new appraisal of Midwestern/North American interior literary traditions and makes clear how vital environmental writing is to this region. To date, no one has written such an eloquent and comprehensive cross-genre analysis of Midwestern environmental literature"--

Christian Knoeller presents a radical reinterpretation of environmental history set in the heartland of America. In an excellent model of narrative-based scholarship, this book dynamically reimagines American environmentalism across generations of writers, artists, and scientists. Knoeller starts out with Audubon, and cites Thoreau’s journals in the 1850s as he assesses an early 17th century account of New England’s natural resources by William Wood, showing the epic decline in game and bird populations in Concord. This reading of environmental history is replicated throughout with a gallery of novelists, poets, essayists, and other commentators as they explore ecological memory and environmental destruction. In apt discussions of Matthiessen, Lopez, Wendell Berry, William Stafford and many others, Knoeller offers vibrant insights into literary history. He also cites his own memoir of perpetual development on his family’s farm in Indiana, enriching the scholarship and making an urgent plea for the healing aesthetics of the imagination.
 
Reading across centuries and genres, Knoeller gives us a vibrant new appraisal of Midwestern/North American interior literary traditions and makes clear how vital environmental writing is to this region. To date, no one has written such an eloquent and comprehensive cross-genre analysis of Midwestern environmental literature.


A boundary-defying analysis of the ecological and cultural consequences of landscape change.

Recenzijas

Reimagining Environmental History provides a chronological and cross genre analysis of the environmental history of the Midwest. Knoeller provides a fresh and compelling perspective on many landscapes of the Midwest that include the Ohio River Valley, the Boundary Waters of Minnesota and lands of the Great Lakes, to stretches of tallgrass prairie and the High Plains of North America. The book is well-supported through careful reading of primary texts and parsing of secondary literature."" - Susan Naramore Maher, author of Deep Map Country: Literary Cartography of the Great Plains

""Knoellers book is an important addition to ongoing scholarship on environmental history in literature, eco criticism, and the intersection of landscape and imaginative vision in literature. It is extremely well written in a voice that will reach scholarly communities and the general public pursuing insights and solutions to dealing with climate change. The research is meticulously careful and thorough. The approach is a close reading of texts leading to new insights on literary history, an urgent plea for the healing aesthetics of the imagination, and an exquisitely clear memoir on the authors experiences which enrich the scholarship."" - Ronald Primeau, author of Herbert Woodward Martin and the African American Tradition in Poetry

Preface xi
Prologue: Opening with Thoreau 3(6)
Nineteenth-century Artist-Naturalists
1 The Making of a Conservationist
9(33)
John James Audubon
2 Envisioning Restoration
42(30)
Gene Stratton-Porter
Ecological Essayists
3 To Live in the Wilderness as a Wild Creature Myself
72(19)
Paul Errington
4 The Wilds That Gave Us Birth
91(25)
Scott Russell Sanders
Poets Expressing Ecological Sensibilities
5 Poetics of Place in "North American Sequence"
116(16)
Theodore Roethke
6 Landscapes of the Past
132(18)
William Stafford
Native American Novelists
7 Landscape and Language
150(25)
Louise Erdrich
8 Giving Voice to History
175(19)
Diane Glancy
Contemporary Literary Naturalists
9 Time's Horizon
194(17)
Elizabeth Dodd
10 Islands of Time
211(23)
Paul Gruchow
Epilogue: Returning 234(7)
Acknowledgments 241(4)
Bibliography 245(16)
About the Author 261(2)
Index 263
Christian Knoeller is associate professor of English at Purdue University. He has published numerous articles and book chapters in ecocriticism and environmental history.