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Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary theory
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Postcolonial Literatures of Climate Change (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,290
Discovery Miles 32 900
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Postcolonial Literatures of Climate Change (Hardcover)
Series: Cross/Cultures, 218
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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Postcolonial Literatures of Climate Change investigates the
evolving nature of postcolonial literary criticism in response to
global, regional, and local environmental transformations brought
about by climate change. It builds upon, and extends, previous
studies in postcolonial ecocriticism to demonstrate how the growing
awareness of human-caused global warming has begun to permeate
literary consciousness, praxis and analysis. The breadth of the
volume's coverage - the diversity of its focal locations, cultures,
genres and texts - serves as a salient reminder that, while climate
change is global, its impacts vary, effecting peoples from place to
place unequally, and often in accordance with their particular
historical experience of colonialism and neo-colonialism, as well
as their ongoing marginalisations. "Demonstrating the urgency of
invoking novel epistemological approaches combining the scientific
and the imaginative, this book is a "must read" for those concerned
about the present and potential impacts of climate change on
formerly colonised areas of the world. The comprehensive and
illuminating Introduction offers a crucial history and current
state of postcolonial ecocriticism as it has been and is addressing
climate crises." - Helen Tiffin, University of Wollongong "The
broad focus on the polar regions, the Pacific and the Caribbean -
with added essays on environmental justice/activism in India and
Egypt - opens up rich terrain for examination under the rubric of
postcolonial and ecocritical analysis, not only expanding recent
studies in this field but also enabling new comparisons and
conceptual linkages." - Helen Gilbert, Royal Holloway, University
of London "The subject is topical and vital and will become even
more so as the problem of how to reconcile the demands of climate
change with the effects on regions and individual nations already
damaged by the economic effects of colonisation and the subsequent
inequalities resulting from neo-colonialism continues to grow." -
Gareth Griffiths, Em. Prof. University of Western Australia
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