Literature and sustainability

Literature and sustainability
Author: Adeline Johns-Putra
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2017-08-16
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1526107643

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This electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-ND) open access license. How might literary scholarship engage with the sustainability debate? Aimed at research scholars and advanced students in literary and environmental studies, this collection brings together twelve essays by leading and up-coming scholars on the theme of literature and sustainability. In today’s sociopolitical world, sustainability has become a ubiquitous term, yet one potentially driven to near meaninglessness by the extent of its usage. While much has been written on sustainability in various domains, this volume sets out to foreground the contributions literary scholarship might make to notions of sustainability, both as an idea with a particular history and as an attempt to reconceptualise the way we live. Essays in this volume take a range of approaches, using the tools of literary analysis to interrogate sustainability’s various paradoxes and to examine how literature in its various forms might envisage notions of sustainability.

Sovereignty and Sustainability

Sovereignty and Sustainability
Author: Siobhan Senier
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2020-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 1496219945

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Sovereignty and Sustainability examines how Native American authors in what is now called New England have maintained their own long and complex literary histories, often entirely outside of mainstream archives, libraries, publishing houses, and other institutions usually associated with literary canon-building. Indigenous people in the Northeast began writing in English almost immediately after the arrival of colonial settlers, and they have continued to write in almost every form—histories, newsletters, novels, poetry, and electronic media. Over the centuries, Native American authors have used literature to assert tribal self-determination and protect traditional homelands and territories. Drawing on the fields of Native American and Indigenous studies, environmental humanities, and literary history, Siobhan Senier argues that sustainability cannot be thought of apart from Indigenous sovereignty and that tribal sovereignty depends on environmental and cultural sustainability. Senier offers the framework of literary stewardship to show how works of Indigenous literature maintain, recirculate, and adapt tribally specific approaches to community, land, and relations. Individual chapters discuss Wampanoag historiography; tribal newsletters and periodicals; novelists and poets Joseph Bruchac, John Christian Hopkins, Cheryl Savageau, and Melissa Tantaquidgeon Zobel; and tribal literature on the web and in electronic archives. Pushing against the idea that Indians have vanished or are irrelevant today, Senier demonstrates to the contrary that regional Native literature is flourishing and looks to a dynamic future.

Cultivating Sustainability in Language and Literature Pedagogy

Cultivating Sustainability in Language and Literature Pedagogy
Author: Roman Bartosch
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2021-03-29
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1000369765

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This book introduces the notion of "educational ecology" as a necessary and promising pedagogic principle for the teaching of Anglophone literatures and cultures in a time of climate change. Drawing on scholarship in the environmental humanities and practice-oriented research in education and literature pedagogy, chapters address the challenges of climate change and the demand for sustainability and environmental pedagogy from the specific perspective of literary and cultural studies and education, arguing that these perspectives constitute a crucial element of the transdisciplinary effort of "cultivating sustainability." The notion of an "educational ecology" takes full advantage of the necessarily dialogic and co-constitutive nature of sustainability-related pedagogical philosophy and practice while it retains the subject-specific focus of research and education in the humanities, centring on and excelling in critical thinking, perspective diversity, language and discourse awareness, and the literary and cultural constructions of meaning. This book will be of great interest to academics, researchers and post-graduate students in the fields of language, literature and culture pedagogy, as well as transdisciplinary researchers in the environmental humanities.

Victorian Sustainability in Literature and Culture

Victorian Sustainability in Literature and Culture
Author: Wendy Parkins
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 386
Release: 2017-11-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1317002105

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From a growing awareness of the depletion of energy resources and the perils of environmental degradation to the founding of self-sufficient communities and the establishment of the National Trust, the concept of sustainability began to take on a new importance in the Victorian period. An emerging sense of the fragility and instability of human and natural resources, and the deeply complex interweaving of the two, led many Victorians to consider how to preserve or protect what they valued, and how individuals, communities (or even nations) could survive and flourish in a world of finite resources. This collection explores not only nascent understandings of sustainability in ecological or environmental contexts but also encompasses consideration of the problem of psychological sustainability and emotional wellbeing in response to the upheavals of modernity. With chapters by scholars working in literary studies, history, cultural studies, and sustainability studies, the volume encompasses a wide diversity of topics, objects, and authors ranging from the 1850s to the early twentieth century. Victorian Sustainability offers new perspectives on debates about sustainability in the present by showing how our current concerns derive from an earlier historical context.

Ecocriticism and Environment

Ecocriticism and Environment
Author: Debashree Dattaray
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2018
Genre: Ecocriticism in literature
ISBN: 9789386552754

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Ecocriticism and Environment: Rethinking Literature and Culture focuses on the interface of sustainability, ecology and the environment as reflected in literature and culture. The eclectic collection of essays examined how writers have, across the twentieth century and in the new millenium, addressed ecological crisis and environmental challenges that cut across national, cultural, socio-political and liguistic borders. The book also singles out literary genres which are particularly sensitive to issues of sustainability. The essays in this volume, by scholars and activists across the globe, address the diverse ways in which environments are imagined, produced and articulated in diverse contexts and mediums and the consequent changes.

Ecocriticism

Ecocriticism
Author: Associate Professor Sustainability Greg Garrard
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2004-07-31
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 113464292X

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This text is one of the first introductory guides to the field of literary ecological criticism. It is the ideal handbook for all students new to the disciplines of literature and environment studies, ecology and green studies.

Sustainability As a State of Mind - the Role of Self-Help Literature in Forging Sustainable Lifestyles

Sustainability As a State of Mind - the Role of Self-Help Literature in Forging Sustainable Lifestyles
Author: Omega Self-help Omega Self-help and Lifestyle Series
Publisher:
Total Pages: 393
Release: 2018-09-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9781720082941

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Self-help literature has attempted to change people's mindsets for more than a century, but its potential to make a difference for the environment has barely been studied before. This book uses an interdisciplinary approach to look at what role self-help literature can play in changing readers' lifestyles from unsustainable to sustainable ways. Through the perspectives of narrative and discourse theories, it examines how four self-help books on cluttering and minimalism argue that consumption should happen, from the point of purchase to the act of discarding. Frame analysis is used to show how the books view waste differently and what implications this has for the lifestyles' level of sustainability. Further, the book looks at the use of personal narratives as a means of persuasion before analyzing how the books argue that their lifestyles will influence the self. Finally, it shows the extent to which the self is framed as capable of influencing communities and the larger society in order to consider the books' potential for successfully inspiring social change.

Literature Review: Product Sustainability

Literature Review: Product Sustainability
Author: Max Weiß
Publisher: GRIN Verlag
Total Pages: 8
Release: 2014-02-10
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3656591857

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Wissenschaftlicher Aufsatz aus dem Jahr 2013 im Fachbereich BWL - Sonstiges, Note: 8,00, University of Twente , Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: This is a literature review of several articles dealing with the vast subject of product sustainability.

Against Sustainability

Against Sustainability
Author: Michelle Neely
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Total Pages: 139
Release: 2020-06-02
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0823288218

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Against Sustainability responds to the twenty-first-century environmental crisis by unearthing the nineteenth-century U.S. literary, cultural, and scientific contexts that gave rise to sustainability, recycling, and preservation. Through novel pairings of antebellum and contemporary writers including Walt Whitman and Lucille Clifton, George Catlin and Louise Erdrich, and Herman Melville and A. S. Byatt, the book demonstrates that some of our most vaunted strategies to address ecological crisis in fact perpetuate environmental degradation. Yet Michelle C. Neely also reveals that the nineteenth century offers useful and generative environmentalisms, if only we know where and how to find them. Henry David Thoreau and Emily Dickinson experimented with models of joyful, anti-consumerist frugality. Hannah Crafts and Harriet Wilson devised forms of radical pet-keeping that model more just ways of living with others. Ultimately, the book explores forms of utopianism that might more reliably guide mainstream environmental culture toward transformative forms of ecological and social justice. Through new readings of familiar texts, Against Sustainability demonstrates how nineteenth-century U.S. literature can help us rethink our environmental paradigms in order to imagine more just and environmentally sound futures.

Memos from the Besieged City

Memos from the Besieged City
Author: Djelal Kadir
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 391
Release: 2011
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0804770506

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This is a historical and critical reassessment of the field of comparative literature—the study of cultures and their literary posterity across national borders and historical frontiers—at a moment when notions of literacy and culture are under inordinate pressure by predatory globalization and militaristic realpolitik.