Ruin and Resilience : Southern Literature and the Environment

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Ruin and Resilience : Southern Literature and the Environment
Description: In Ruin and Resilience, Daniel Spoth confronts why the environmental stories told about the U.S. South curve inevitably toward distressing plotlines. Examining more than a dozen works of postbellum literature and cinema, Spoth's analysis winds from John Muir's walking journey across the war-torn South, through the troubling of southern environmentalism's modernity by Faulkner and Hurston, past the accounts of its acceleration in Welty and O'Connor, and finally into the present, uncovering how the tragic econarrative is transformed by contemporary food studies, climate fiction, and speculative tales inspired by the region. Phrased as a reaction to the rising temperatures and swelling sea levels in the South, Ruin and Resilience conceptualizes an environmental, ecocritical ethos for the southern United States that takes account of its fundamentally vulnerable status and navigates the space between its reactionary politics and its ecological failures.
Authors: Daniel Spoth
Resource Type: eBook.
Subjects: Ecocriticism in literature, Environmentalism in literature, American literature--Southern States--History and criticism
Categories: LITERARY CRITICISM / American / Regional, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Regional Studies, LITERARY CRITICISM / Subjects & Themes / Nature
Database: eBook Collection (EBSCOhost)
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