ABSTRACT

This book examines current trends in scholarly thinking about the new field of the Environmental Humanities, focusing in particular on how the history of globalization and imperialism represents a special challenge to the representation of environmental issues. Essays in this path-breaking collection examine the role that narrative, visual, and aesthetic forms can play in drawing attention to and shaping our ideas about long-term and catastrophic environmental challenges such as climate change, militarism, deforestation, the pollution and management of the global commons, petrocapitalism, and the commodification of nature.

The volume presents a postcolonial approach to the environmental humanities, especially in conjunction with current thinking in areas such as political ecology and environmental justice. Spanning regions such as Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Australasia and the Pacific, as well as North America, the volume includes essays by founding figures in the field as well as new scholars, providing vital new interdisciplinary perspectives on: the politics of the earth; disaster, vulnerability, and resilience; political ecologies and environmental justice; world ecologies; and the Anthropocene. In engaging critical ecologies, the volume poses a postcolonial environmental humanities for the twenty-first century. At the heart of this is a conviction that a thoroughly global, postcolonial, and comparative approach is essential to defining the emergent field of the environmental humanities, and that this field has much to offer in understanding critical issues surrounding the creation of alternative ecological futures.

chapter |32 pages

Introduction

A Postcolonial Environmental Humanities

part I|82 pages

The Politics of Earth

chapter 1|16 pages

Narrativizing Nature

India, Empire, and Environment

chapter 2|22 pages

“The Perverse Little People of the Hills”

Unearthing Ecology and Transculturation in Reginald Farrer's Alpine Plant Hunting

chapter 3|22 pages

Bagasse

Caribbean Art and the Debris of the Sugar Plantation

chapter 4|20 pages

Writing a Native Garden?

Environmental Language and Post-Mabo Literature in Australia

part II|72 pages

Disaster, Vulnerability, and Resilience

chapter 6|22 pages

Nuclear Disaster

The Marshall Islands Experience and Lessons for a Post-Fukushima World

chapter 7|25 pages

Island Vulnerability and Resilience

Combining Knowledges for Disaster Risk Reduction, Including Climate Change Adaptation

part III|56 pages

Political Ecologies and Environmental Justice

chapter 8|19 pages

The Edgework of the Clerk

189Resilience in Arundhati Roy's Walking with the Comrades

chapter 9|19 pages

Filming the Emergence of Popular Environmentalism in Latin America

Postcolonialism and Buen Vivir

chapter 10|17 pages

Witnessing the Nature of Violence

Resource Extraction and Political Ecologies in the Contemporary African Novel

part IV|64 pages

Mapping World Ecologies

chapter 11|24 pages

Narrating a Global Future

245Our Common Future and the Public Hearings of the World Commission on Environment and Development

chapter 12|18 pages

Oil on Sugar

Commodity Frontiers and Peripheral Aesthetics

chapter 13|21 pages

Ghost Mountains and Stone Maidens

Ecological Imperialism, Compound Catastrophe, and the Post-Soviet Ecogothic

part V|66 pages

Terraforming, Climate Change, and the Anthropocene

chapter 14|25 pages

Terraforming Planet Earth

chapter 15|19 pages

Climate Change, Cosmology, and Poetry

The Case of Derek Walcott's Omeros

chapter 16|21 pages

Ordinary Futures

Interspecies Worldings in the Anthropocene