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American Studies, Ecocriticism, and Citizenship - Thinking and Acting in the Local and Global Commons (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,324
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American Studies, Ecocriticism, and Citizenship - Thinking and Acting in the Local and Global Commons (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature
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This collection reclaims public intellectuals and scholars
important to the foundational work in American Studies that
contributed to emerging conceptions of an "ecological citizenship"
advocating something other than nationalism or an "exclusionary
ethics of place." Co-editors Adamson and Ruffin recover
underrecognized field genealogies in American Studies (i.e. the
work of early scholars whose scope was transnational and whose
activism focused on race, class and gender) and ecocriticism (i.e.
the work of movement leaders, activists and scholars concerned with
environmental justice whose work predates the 1990s advent of the
field). They stress the necessity of a confluence of intellectual
traditions, or "interdisciplinarities," in meeting the challenges
presented by the "anthropocene," a new era in which human beings
have the power to radically endanger the planet or support new
approaches to transnational, national and ecological citizenship.
Contributors to the collection examine literary, historical, and
cultural examples from the 19th century to the 21st. They explore
notions of the common-namely, common humanity, common wealth, and
common ground-and the relation of these notions to often
conflicting definitions of who (or what) can have access to
"citizenship" and "rights." The book engages in scholarly
ecological analysis via the lens of various human groups-ethnic,
racial, gendered, coalitional-that are shaping twenty-first century
environmental experience and vision. Read together, the essays
included in American Studies, Ecocriticism, and Citizenship create
a "methodological commons" where environmental justice case studies
and interviews with activists and artists living in places as
diverse as the U.S., Canada, Haiti, Puerto Rico, Taiwan and the
Navajo Nation, can be considered alongside literary and social
science analysis that contributes significantly to current debates
catalyzed by nuclear meltdowns, oil spills, hurricanes, and climate
change, but also by hopes for a common future that will ensure the
rights of all beings--human and nonhuman-- to exist, maintain, and
regenerate life cycles and evolutionary processes
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