ISBN-13: 9781032033785 / Twarda / 2023 / 424 str.
The Routledge Companion to Ecopoetics offers a comprehensive coverage of the vital and growing movement of ecopoetics, charting the historical influences informing ecopoetics, delineating its various subdivisions, and presenting a global range of established figures and emerging scholarly debates.
Introduction
Section I. Perspectives
Mary Newell
Chapter 1. The Poetics of the Self-Conscious Anthropocene
Lynn Keller
Chapter 2. The Agencene
H. L. Hix
Chapter 3. Decolonial Praxis/Indigenous Resurgence: Relational Accountability in ‘Kin Study’ Poetics
Linda Russo
Chapter 4. Planetary Poiesis
Aaron Moe
Chapter 5. Lucretius, Extinction Rebellion, and the Poetics of Love and Rage
Evelyn Reilly
Section II. Experiments
Julia Fiedorczuk
Chapter 6. Indigenous Poiesis: The Semiotics of Circulation in Villegas’ Maya Poetry
Charles Maurice Pigott
Chapter 7. Embodiment as an ‘Ongoing Formal Experience’: New Materialist Encounters with Ecopoetics
Joanna Mąkowska
Chapter 8. Down in Strata: Stratigraphic Poetics and Feminist Literary Engagement in Brenda Hillman’s Cascadia
Gerald Maa and Ben Rutherfurd
Chapter 9. Cartographical Imagination as an Ecopoetic Mode of Engaging the Global
Grzegorz Czemiel
Chapter 10. "Not the light / of any evening / but the light / of this evening": Ecopoetics, Ethics and Particularity in the Work of Thomas A Clark
Harriet Tarlo
Section III. Earth and Water
Orchid Tierney
Chapter 11. Phytopoetics: Human-Plant Relations and the Poiesis of Vegetal Life"
John Charles Ryan
Chapter 12. Amazonian Zoophytography: Ecopoetic Writing with Animals and Plants
Patrícia Vieira
Chapter 13. Elegiac Joy: Ross Gay and Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s Poetics of the Garden
Anissa Wardi
Chapter 14. Riparian Entanglements: an Ecopoetics of the Colonial River
Stephen Collis
Chapter 15. "Nature’s way of representing the world": Alice Oswald’s Poetry and Poetics of Water
Christian Schmitt-Kilb
Chapter 16. Women Poets Breaking the Waves of the Portuguese Sea
Nuno Marques and Margarida Vale de Gato
Chapter 17. "Will plastic make life impossible?: Transpacific Poets Confront Ocean Plastic
Aaron Pinnix
Section IV. Waste/Toxicity/Precarity
Adam Dickinson
Chapter 18. The Work of Reconnection, Japanese Ecopoetry by Rumiko Kora and Ryoichi Wago
Ayako Takahashi and Judy Halebsky
Chapter 19. "The machine took me in’: Processing Nuclear Labors in Kathleen Flenniken’s Plume"
Nicole M. Merola
Chapter 20. Extinction and Re-Plenitude
Joshua Schuster
Chapter 21. Anti-Atmospheres and Everyday Rare Phenomena
Orchid Tierney
Chapter 22. "Imperial Debris": the Vietnam War and Mai Der Vang’s Yellow Rain
Zhou Xiaojing
Section V. Environmental Justice and Activism
Bernard Quetchenbach
Chapter 23. Saboteurial Poetics: Blockades, Machine-Breaking, & Infrastructure from Below
Alexandra Campbell and Fred Carter
Chapter 24. Witness to the Exchange: Documentary Environmental Poetics
Jonathan Skinner
Chapter 25. Energy Ecopoetics
Margaret Ronda and Kristin George Bagdanov
Chapter 26. "To end again tomorrow": The Virtual Reality Ecopoetics of On the Morning You Wake (to the End of the World
Kaitlin Moore
Section VI. Region and Place
Bernard Quetchenbach
Chapter 27. African Ecopoetics
Philip Aghoghvwia and Emily McGiffin
Chapter 28. ‘New’ Nature Poetry: An Ecopoetical Reading of Contemporary
Pakistani Nature Poetry
Munazza Yaqoob
Chapter 29. Ecopoetics and Ecofeminist Poetics in Contemporary China
Liansu Meng
Chapter 30. Vahni Capildeo and the Convergence of Ecopoetics and Dougla Poetics
Lubabah Chowdhury
Chapter 31. Building a Homestead: An Ecopoetic Reading of the Poetry of Paul Celan
Paweł Piszczatowski
Chapter 32. Country Matters: Introducing Australian Ecopoetics
Tom Bristow
Chapter 33. Francophone Ecopoetics: The Performativity of the Text
Gina Stamm
Section VII. Subjectivities/Affects/Sexualities
Orchid Tierney
Chapter 34. Taken by the Creek: The Queer Ecology of Minnie Bruce Pratt’s Crime Against Nature
Stacey Balkun
Chapter 35. Entangled Remembrances: Counter-memory and New Materialism in Judith Wright’s Poetry"
Rıza Çimen
Chapter 36. Indigenous Counter-Narratives: Sámi Poetry Challenging the Mastery of Nature
Anne Heith
Chapter 37. The (Un)Sustainable Self and Post-Human Spaces of Interiority in Contemporary North American and Polish Poetry
Paulina Ambroży
Chapter 38. It Expresses THEM!: Black Women’s Writings and Ecopoetics
Carlyn Ferrari
Chapter 39. Who was ever only themselves?" Cross-border Ecologies of Translation
Zoë Skoulding
Julia Fiedorczuk is a poet, writer, translator, and lecturer at the Institute of English Studies and a cofounder of the Environmental Studies Center at Warsaw University. She created the program for the experimental School of Ecopoetics at the Institute of Reportage in Warsaw. She has published several poetry books, the last of which, Psalms (2017), received the Szymborska Prize, Poland’s most prestigious award for poetry, as well as three novels, short stories and essays in ecocriticism, including Ekopoetyka / Ecopoética / Ecopoetics (with Gerardo Beltrán, Warsaw, 2015). Her work has been translated into over 20 languages, including books in English, Spanish, Swedish, Ukrainian, Lithuanian, Serbian, Chinese and Georgian.
Mary Newell authored the poetry chapbooks Re-SURGE and TILT/ HOVER/ VEER and essays including "When Poetry Rivers" (Interim journal 38.3). She is co-editor of Poetics for the More-than-Human-World: An Anthology of Poetry and Commentary. She teaches creative writing at the University of Connecticut.
Bernard Quetchenbach is the author of Back from the Far Field, a study of twentieth century American poetry; two poetry collections; and two chapbooks. His essay collection Accidental Gravity was a finalist and honorable mention in the 2017 Foreword Indies Book of the Year contest. "The Man by the Fire," his meditation on a Gary Snyder poem, was selected as the 2019 winner of the O. Marvin Lewis award from Weber: The Contemporary West. He edited The Bunch Grass Motel: The Collected Poems of Randall Gloege, a 2018 High Plains Book Awards finalist. With Mary Newell and Sarah Nolan, he edited Poetics for the More-Than-Human World, an anthology of poetry and commentary from several continents. He was an Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness Artist-in-Residence in the Custer-Gallatin National Forest in 2015, and a workshop leader for the Yellowstone Forever/National Park Service Arts-in-the Park program in 2017. He is a professor of English at Montana State University Billings, where he teaches literature, environmental humanities, composition, and creative writing.
Orchid Tierney is an assistant professor of English at Kenyon College. She is the author of the collection a year of misreading the wildcats (2019).
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