From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene
abstract: From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film demonstrates how American studies methodologies, ecological literary criticism, and environmental justice theory provide both time-tested and new analytical tools for reading texts from trans...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-297672018-06-22T03:06:04Z From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene abstract: From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film demonstrates how American studies methodologies, ecological literary criticism, and environmental justice theory provide both time-tested and new analytical tools for reading texts from transnational perspectives. Recently, American literary scholars have been responding to calls for collective interdisciplinary response to widening social disparities and species collapses caused by climate change in the new epoch recently being termed "the anthropocene." In response, I analyze canonical texts, such as Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World in juxtaposition with Neill Blomkamp's South African science fiction thriller District 9 and contemporary US American novels such as Toni Morrison's Sula, William Faulkner's "The Bear" in Go Down, Moses and Richard Power's Generosity and The Echo Maker, to show how writers, filmmakers, and academics have been calling attention to dramatic climate events that consequently challenge the public to rethink the relationships among human beings to other species, and to ecological systems of low predictability, high variability, and frequent extremes. Rather than focusing solely on the "human," I examine how the relationships and livelihoods of multi-species communities shape and are shaped by political, economic, and cultural forces. As a whole, this dissertation seeks to make abstract, often intangible global patterns and concepts accessible by providing models for what I call "readings in the anthropocene" or re-readings of classic and contemporary texts and film that offer insights into changing human behavior and suggesting alternative management practices of local and global commons as well as opportunities to imagine how to live in and beyond the anthropocene. Dissertation/Thesis Turner, Kyndra Preeman (Author) Adamson, Joni (Advisor) Lussier, Mark (Committee member) Sadowski-Smith, Claudia (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Literature Environmental studies American studies Anthropocene Ecocriticism Film Literature eng 140 pages Doctoral Dissertation English 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29767 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015 |
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English |
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Doctoral Thesis |
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Literature Environmental studies American studies Anthropocene Ecocriticism Film Literature |
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Literature Environmental studies American studies Anthropocene Ecocriticism Film Literature From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene |
description |
abstract: From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film demonstrates how American studies methodologies, ecological literary criticism, and environmental justice theory provide both time-tested and new analytical tools for reading texts from transnational perspectives. Recently, American literary scholars have been responding to calls for collective interdisciplinary response to widening social disparities and species collapses caused by climate change in the new epoch recently being termed "the anthropocene." In response, I analyze canonical texts, such as Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World in juxtaposition with Neill Blomkamp's South African science fiction thriller District 9 and contemporary US American novels such as Toni Morrison's Sula, William Faulkner's "The Bear" in Go Down, Moses and Richard Power's Generosity and The Echo Maker, to show how writers, filmmakers, and academics have been calling attention to dramatic climate events that consequently challenge the public to rethink the relationships among human beings to other species, and to ecological systems of low predictability, high variability, and frequent extremes. Rather than focusing solely on the "human," I examine how the relationships and livelihoods of multi-species communities shape and are shaped by political, economic, and cultural forces. As a whole, this dissertation seeks to make abstract, often intangible global patterns and concepts accessible by providing models for what I call "readings in the anthropocene" or re-readings of classic and contemporary texts and film that offer insights into changing human behavior and suggesting alternative management practices of local and global commons as well as opportunities to imagine how to live in and beyond the anthropocene. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation English 2015 |
author2 |
Turner, Kyndra Preeman (Author) |
author_facet |
Turner, Kyndra Preeman (Author) |
title |
From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene |
title_short |
From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene |
title_full |
From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene |
title_fullStr |
From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene |
title_full_unstemmed |
From Frankenstein to District 9: Ecocritical Readings of Classic and Contemporary Fiction and Film in the Anthropocene |
title_sort |
from frankenstein to district 9: ecocritical readings of classic and contemporary fiction and film in the anthropocene |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29767 |
_version_ |
1718700716912017408 |