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The talk of a catastrophic contemporary environmental crisis is all
around us. Yet the relationship between such a crises and literary
and cultural forms remains relatively unexamined. This book offers
a way to think about this relationship by reading a number of key
contemporary Indian novels alongside accounts of the severely
stressed ecology and environment of the country. In doing so,
postcolonial environments also suggests a new alignment between the
theoretical fields of postcolonial and environmental studies. In
showing how such an alignment can provide us with a materialist and
historicist account of environments of cultures and cultures of
environment, the book makes an original contribution to the
emergent area of green postcolonialism.
How did the Victorians think about disasters such as famines and
epidemic diseases? What was the relationship between such
cataclysmic events and literary forms, styles and genres? In what
way was thinking about disasters also crucial to practices of
governance? Does the legacy of such Victorian thinking still shape
our contemporary responses to 'natural' disasters? This book seeks
to answer such questions by looking at a wide range of
administrative, medical, historical, journalistic and literary
texts written about Britain's key imperial possession in the
19th-century - south Asia. In doing so, it expands our ideas about
Victorian literature, just as it reshapes our definitions of
'natural' disasters themselves.
Natural Disasters and Victorian Empire looks at the relationship
between epidemics and famines in south Asia and Victorian
literature and culture. It suggests that much of how we think today
about disasters, state and society can be traced back to the
19th-century British imperial experience.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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