This book provides an engaging, challenging and lively introduction to contemporary British and Irish poetry. It covers work by poets from a wide range of ethnic and regional backgrounds and covers a broad range of poetic styles, including mainstream names like Seamus Heaney and Carol Ann Duffy alon
Poetry and the Anthropocene: Ecology, Biology and Technology in Contemporary British and Irish Poetry
โ Scribed by Sam Solnick
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2016
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 239
- Series
- Routledge Environmental Humanities
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book asks what it means to write poetry in and about the Anthropocene, the name given to a geological epoch where humans have a global ecological impact. Combining critical approaches such as ecocriticism and posthumanism with close reading and archival research, it argues that the Anthropocene requires poetry and the humanities to find new ways of thinking about unfamiliar spatial and temporal scales, about how we approach the metaphors and discourses of the sciences, and about the role of those processes and materials that confound humansโ attempts to control or even conceptualise them. Poetry and the Anthropocene draws on the work of a series of poets from across the political and poetic spectrum, analysing how understandings of technology shape literature about place, evolution and the tradition of writing about what still gets called Nature. The book explores how writersโ understanding of sciences such as climatology or biochemistry might shape their poetryโs form, and how literature can respond to environmental crises without descending into agitprop, self-righteousness or apocalyptic cynicism. In the face of the Anthropoceneโs radical challenges to ethics, aesthetics and politics, the book shows how poetry offers significant ways of interrogating and rendering the complex relationships between organisms and their environments in a world increasingly marked by technology.
Tags: Public Policy, Environmental, General, Development, Technology & Engineering, Environmental Policy, Sustainable Development, Business & Economics, Political Science
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgement
Introduction: Poetry and science
Undermining Natureโs solid ground
Welcome to the Anthropocene
The form of ecology
The evolution of Ted Hughes
Derek Mahonโs ironic ecology
Rematerialising Prynne
1. Evolving systems of (eco)poetry
A non-local habitation and a name
Anthropos kainos โ technology and the posthuman
Ecologies of mind: communicating ecosystems and systems of communication
Poetics in the Anthropocene
2. โLife subdued to its instrumentโ: Hughes, mutation and technology
Fishing: adaptation and contact
Living form and posthuman adaptation
Science, religion and the environmental revolution
Violence and technology
Crow: evolving myth/mythologising evolution
Hatching a crow: mutation and poetry
Testing his metal
3. โGerminal ironiesโ: Changing climates in the poetry of Derek Mahon
โRage for orderโ: ironies of time and place
A โchaos of complex systemsโ: economy and ecology
Beautiful souls and simulative politics
Climate change and a new look at Life on Earth
Pious hopes
4. The resistant materials of Jeremy Prynne
Coal and metal: conditions of landscape and questions concerning technology
Pertinent junk and the sound of information
The secret lives of plants and viruses
Mutating code scripts
Wasted fields and digested hydrocarbons
This difficult matter
Conclusion: Evolution, agency and feedback at the
end of a world
The life of the poets
Feedback loops
Index
โฆ Subjects
Public Policy, Environmental, General, Development, Technology & Engineering, Environmental Policy, Sustainable Development, Business & Economics, Political Science
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