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Sustaining the West

Editat de Liza Piper, Lisa Szabo-Jones
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 mar 2015
Western Canadas natural environment faces intensifying threats from industrialisation in agriculture and resource development, social and cultural complicity in these destructive practices, and most recently the negative local effects brought about by global climate change. In Sustaining the West: Cultural Responses to Western Environments Past and Present, arts and humanities scholars and literary and visual artists tackle these pressing environmental issues in provocative and transformative ways. Their commitment to environmental causes emerges through the fields of environmental history, environmental and ecological criticism (ecocriticism), ecofeminism, ecoart, ecopoetry, and environmental journalism. The complex nature of the problems being addressed calls for productive, interdisciplinary solutions. This indispensable and timely resource brings together creative writers, literary scholars, historians, curators, visual artists, naturalists, and geographers in a sustained cross-pollinating conversation across the environmental humanities about forms of representation and activism that enable ecological knowledge and ethical action on behalf of Western Canadian environments, yet have global reach. Common developments in the contributors construction of environmental knowledge include a focus on the power of sentiment in linking people to the fate of nature, and the need to decolonise social and environmental relations and assumptions in the West.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781554589234
ISBN-10: 1554589231
Pagini: 365
Ilustrații: 28 colour illus
Dimensiuni: 150 x 226 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Wilfrid Laurier University Press

Notă biografică

Liza Piper is an associate professor at the University of Alberta, where she teaches environmental and Canadian history. She researches and writes about the relations between people and the rest of nature in the past, primarily in northern environments and with a particular focus on the roles of science and industry and the consequences for diet and health. She is the author of The Industrial Transformation of Subarctic Canada (2009). Lisa Szabo-Jones is a Ph.D. candidate in English and film studies at the University of Alberta and a 2009 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholar. She is a founding and current editor of the online journal The Goose, a biannual publication of the Association for Literature, Environment, and Culture in Canada, established in 2005.

Cuprins

Table of Contents for
Sustaining the West: Cultural Responses to Canadian Environments, edited by Liza Piper and Lisa Szabo-Jones
List of illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: What if the Problem is People? | Liza Piper
Part 1: Acting on Behalf Of
Chapter 1: Grass Futures: Possibilities for a Re-engagement with Prairie | Trevor Herriot
Chapter 2: Wastewest: A State of Mind | Warren Cariou
Chapter 3: Sustaining Collaboration: The Woodhaven Eco Art Project | Nancy Holmes
Chapter 4: A Natural History and Dioramic Performance: Restoring Camosun Bog in Vancouver, British Columbia | Lisa Szabo-Jones and David Brownstein
Chapter 5: A Subtle Activism of the Heart | Beth Carruthers
Chapter 6: Sublime Animal | Maria Whiteman
Chapter 7: The Becoming-Animal of Being Caribou: Art, Ethics, Politics | Dianne Chisholm
Interlude: Creating Metaphors for Change | Lyndal Osborne
Part 2: Constructing Knowledge
Chapter 8: Poetry, Science, and Knowledge of Place: A Dispatch from the Coast | Nicholas Bradley
Chapter 9: Deception in High Places: The Making and Unmaking of Mounts Brown and Hooker | Zac Robinson and Stephen Slemon
Chapter 10: Escarpments, Agriculture, and the Historical Experience of Certainty in Manitoba and Ontario | Shannon Stunden Bower and Sean Gouglas
Chapter 11: Whatever Else Climate Change Is Freedom: Frontier Mythologies, the Carbon Imaginary, and British Columbia Coastal Forestry Novels | Richard Pickard
Chapter 12: Endangered Species, Endangered Spaces: Exploring the Grasslands of Trevor Herriot's Grass, Sky, Song and the Wetlands of Terry Tempest Williams's Refuge | Angela Waldie
Chapter 13: What Should We Sacrifice for Bitumen? Literature Interrupts Oil Capital's Utopian Imaginings | Jon Gordon
Interlude: Symphony for a Head of Wheat Burning in the Dark | Harold Rhenisch
Part 3: Maternal Expressions
Chapter 14: Propositions from Under Mill Creek Bridge: A Practice of Reading | Christine Stewart
Chapter 15: Understory Enduring the Sixth Mass Extinction, ca 2009-11 | Rita Wong
Chapter 16: Seeding Coordinates, Planting Memories: Here, There, & Elsewhere in W.H. New's Underwood Log | Travis V. Mason
Chapter 17: Re-Envisioning epic in Jon Whyte's Rocky Mountain Poem The fells of brightness | Harry Vandervlist
Chapter 18: Ware's Waldo: Hydroelectric Development and the Creation of the Other in British Columbia | Daniel Sims
Afterword: Humming Along With the Bees: A Few Words on Cross-Pollination | Pamela Banting
Bibliography
Contributors
Index