Searching for the Anthropocene: A Journey into the Environmental Humanities
Autor Dr. Christopher Schabergen Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 dec 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501351822
ISBN-10: 1501351826
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501351826
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Engages with one of the most urgent and fast-growing areas in literary studies and the humanities more broadly: environmental humanities or eco-criticism
Notă biografică
Christopher Schaberg is Dorothy Harrell Brown Distinguished Professor of English at Loyola University New Orleans, USA. He is the author of The Textual Life of Airports (2013), The End of Airports (2015), Airportness (2017), and The Work of Literature in an Age of Post-Truth (2018), all published by Bloomsbury.
Cuprins
List of FiguresPart I Home SickPart II Jet LagAcknowledgementsReprint AcknowledgementsBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
[Schaberg] makes sharp observations on the Anthropocene's reflection across the span of human projects, from the most insignificant to the most magnificent. Schaberg divides the book into two parts: 'Home Sick' and 'Jet Lag.' . Each part comprises multiple short pieces that speak to large ecological themes. Each piece is a treat of ecological wisdom, self-reflection, critical imagination, and elegant writing. Searching for the Anthropocene carries the ecocritical lessons beyond Michigan and midwestern America to the continental US and beyond, demonstrating how the human ecological footprint has grown into the Anthropocene. An invaluable resource for students and scholars of ecocriticism, critical theory, and environmental studies. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.
Moving nimbly between personal narrative and academic theory, Christopher Schaberg locates the Anthropocene in compelling, illustrative sites--from the sand dunes of his Michigan childhood where he gathered stones derived from 350-million-year-old coral to the new billion-dollar airport terminal being built, ill-advisedly, just above sea level in his current home of New Orleans. This is an elegantly-written book that guides us through the dizzying epiphanies of scale, co-implication, and self-recognition that the Anthropocene concept demands.
Christopher Schaberg wanders Michigan's north woods and far flung airfields to lyrically ferret out the absurdity of the 'Anthropocene.' Schaberg shows how Homo sapiens are no longer in charge of anything, despite our terrifying and irreversible wounding of a planet reeling from climate change. It's a coin-toss whether there will be anything around at the end of the next decade capable of reading this fine book.
Searching for the Anthropocene is a lyrical reckoning with what it means to love and remember talismanic places in a time when the very foundations of our environmental consciousness have shifted. In this restless search from the shores of Michigan to New Orleans, what Schaberg finds are the contours of a new Nature, one etched with both the tragedy and beauty of human activity.
Christopher Schaberg embarks on a captivating personal journey that effortlessly weaves experiences in the natural world with the unresolved landscapes of the Anthropocene. He's a competent guide through the quixotic stories we tell ourselves in an attempt to tame a future that terrifies us.
What sort of home-makers have we become now we are living so at large in the world? Christopher Schaberg's vivid and original sketchbook reflections on anthropogenic change, as it has transformed the landscapes of once rural Michigan and as it has created a new and defining world habitat in airports and air travel, are really worth having. Here, in his book, academic theoretical thinking that has stirred and shaken our understanding of how we now live in modern nature is usefully tested in the remnant wild, as it were, by being taken for a walk along a polluted beach or by waiting with the rest of us in the economy lounge. Mostly the news is bad, but Schaberg's smart and fine writing answers the still relevant question Bertolt Brecht posed in a mid-20th-century poem: 'Will there be singing in the dark times?'--'Yes, there will be singing--about the dark times.'
Searching for the Anthropocene is a welcome addition to the expanding literature of the epoch. The personal anecdotes recounted by Schaberg are poignant, relatable and relevant to the fast-paced narrative of the Anthropocene whilst drawing attention to the difficulties of writing about place within this context.
Interwoven with personal narrative, pop-culture references, and ecological thought, Searching for the Anthropocene: A Journey into the Environmental Humanities builds a path for us to follow through this period we have both defined and rejected.
Moving nimbly between personal narrative and academic theory, Christopher Schaberg locates the Anthropocene in compelling, illustrative sites--from the sand dunes of his Michigan childhood where he gathered stones derived from 350-million-year-old coral to the new billion-dollar airport terminal being built, ill-advisedly, just above sea level in his current home of New Orleans. This is an elegantly-written book that guides us through the dizzying epiphanies of scale, co-implication, and self-recognition that the Anthropocene concept demands.
Christopher Schaberg wanders Michigan's north woods and far flung airfields to lyrically ferret out the absurdity of the 'Anthropocene.' Schaberg shows how Homo sapiens are no longer in charge of anything, despite our terrifying and irreversible wounding of a planet reeling from climate change. It's a coin-toss whether there will be anything around at the end of the next decade capable of reading this fine book.
Searching for the Anthropocene is a lyrical reckoning with what it means to love and remember talismanic places in a time when the very foundations of our environmental consciousness have shifted. In this restless search from the shores of Michigan to New Orleans, what Schaberg finds are the contours of a new Nature, one etched with both the tragedy and beauty of human activity.
Christopher Schaberg embarks on a captivating personal journey that effortlessly weaves experiences in the natural world with the unresolved landscapes of the Anthropocene. He's a competent guide through the quixotic stories we tell ourselves in an attempt to tame a future that terrifies us.
What sort of home-makers have we become now we are living so at large in the world? Christopher Schaberg's vivid and original sketchbook reflections on anthropogenic change, as it has transformed the landscapes of once rural Michigan and as it has created a new and defining world habitat in airports and air travel, are really worth having. Here, in his book, academic theoretical thinking that has stirred and shaken our understanding of how we now live in modern nature is usefully tested in the remnant wild, as it were, by being taken for a walk along a polluted beach or by waiting with the rest of us in the economy lounge. Mostly the news is bad, but Schaberg's smart and fine writing answers the still relevant question Bertolt Brecht posed in a mid-20th-century poem: 'Will there be singing in the dark times?'--'Yes, there will be singing--about the dark times.'
Searching for the Anthropocene is a welcome addition to the expanding literature of the epoch. The personal anecdotes recounted by Schaberg are poignant, relatable and relevant to the fast-paced narrative of the Anthropocene whilst drawing attention to the difficulties of writing about place within this context.
Interwoven with personal narrative, pop-culture references, and ecological thought, Searching for the Anthropocene: A Journey into the Environmental Humanities builds a path for us to follow through this period we have both defined and rejected.