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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Tobias Menely (University of California, Davis) , Jesse Oak Taylor (University of Washington)Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press Volume: 1 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9780271078724ISBN 10: 0271078723 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 13 October 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsElaborating on Dipesh Chakrabarty's linking of human and earth history in the Anthropocene, the editors frame this scintillating volume by asserting that we humans now read our 'transformative presence in the Earth's strata, ' that is, paradoxically both changing and interpreting the Earth's structures. Skills for textual analysis are thus crucial. With major ecocritical voices debating the possibilities--and horrors--of the Anthropocene, Anthropocene Reading is a major contribution to ecocriticism and a delight to read. --Heather I. Sullivan, Trinity University A rich collection of essays, their span befitting the scale and diversity of an Earth being transformed. Ranging as it does from the crowded present into deep time, where the most immediate and personal of human stories intermesh with planetary narrative, Anthropocene Reading is a deeply thought-provoking volume. --Jan A. Zalasiewicz, author of The Goldilocks Planet: The Four Billion Year Story of Earth's Climate The hypothesis of the Anthropocene as forwarded by earth scientists registers a moment of ecological crisis and an unavoidable challenge to critical and historical practice in literary studies. This collection of experimental forays meets that challenge with radical--and welcome--new approaches to the archives of the human age. Both erudite and engaged, the contributors offer essential scholarship for the years to come. --Eric Gidal, author of Ossianic Unconformities: Bardic Poetry in the Industrial Age An ambitious and exhilarating collection. It takes the Anthropocene debates well beyond their familiar terrain. The book will appeal to readers from a host of disciplines, from geology to history, geography, and literary studies. --Rob Nixon, author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor All told, the 13 contributions offer varied and stimulating studies displaying how literary methods can effectively interrogate, reframe, and explicate the multi-faceted qualities and character of the Anthropocene. -Justin Westgate, Antipodes Elaborating on Dipesh Chakrabarty's linking of human and earth history in the Anthropocene, the editors frame this scintillating volume by asserting that we humans now read our `transformative presence in the Earth's strata,' that is, paradoxically both changing and interpreting the Earth's structures. Skills for textual analysis are thus crucial. With ecocritical voices debating the possibilities-and horrors-of the Anthropocene, Anthropocene Reading is a major contribution to ecocriticism and a delight to read. -Heather I. Sullivan, Trinity University The hypothesis of the Anthropocene as forwarded by earth scientists registers a moment of ecological crisis and an unavoidable challenge to critical and historical practice in literary studies. This collection of experimental forays meets that challenge with radical-and welcome-new approaches to the archives of the human age. Both erudite and engaged, the contributors offer essential scholarship for the years to come. -Eric Gidal, author of Ossianic Unconformities: Bardic Poetry in the Industrial Age An ambitious and exhilarating collection. It takes the Anthropocene debates well beyond their familiar terrain. The book will appeal to readers from a host of disciplines, from geology to history, geography, and literary studies. -Rob Nixon, author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor A rich collection of essays, their span befitting the scale and diversity of an Earth being transformed. Ranging as it does from the crowded present into deep time, where the most immediate and personal of human stories intermesh with planetary narrative, Anthropocene Reading is a deeply thought-provoking volume. -Jan A. Zalasiewicz, author of The Goldilocks Planet: The Four Billion Year Story of Earth's Climate Though responding to a single challenge, the essays vary immensely, but it is pleasant to see all contributors thinking creatively and tentatively, sometimes driven to the esoteric extremes from which only critical neologisms can rescue them. The experiment is interesting and obviously relevant for critical theory in a changing world. -G. D. MacDonald, Choice Anthropocene Reading demonstrates why the era of what some are also calling the `Great Acceleration' reaches into and affects so many fields, sciences, and disciplines. -Jonathan Hahn, Sierra Elaborating on Dipesh Chakrabarty's linking of human and earth history in the Anthropocene, the editors frame this scintillating volume by asserting that we humans now read our 'transformative presence in the Earth's strata, ' that is, paradoxically both changing and interpreting the Earth's structures. Skills for textual analysis are thus crucial. With major ecocritical voices debating the possibilities--and horrors--of the Anthropocene, Anthropocene Reading is a major contribution to ecocriticism and a delight to read. --Heather I. Sullivan, Trinity University All told, the 13 contributions offer varied and stimulating studies displaying how literary methods can effectively interrogate, reframe, and explicate the multi-faceted qualities and character of the Anthropocene. -Justin Westgate, Antipodes Elaborating on Dipesh Chakrabarty's linking of human and earth history in the Anthropocene, the editors frame this scintillating volume by asserting that we humans now read our 'transformative presence in the Earth's strata,' that is, paradoxically both changing and interpreting the Earth's structures. Skills for textual analysis are thus crucial. With ecocritical voices debating the possibilities-and horrors-of the Anthropocene, Anthropocene Reading is a major contribution to ecocriticism and a delight to read. -Heather I. Sullivan, Trinity University The hypothesis of the Anthropocene as forwarded by earth scientists registers a moment of ecological crisis and an unavoidable challenge to critical and historical practice in literary studies. This collection of experimental forays meets that challenge with radical-and welcome-new approaches to the archives of the human age. Both erudite and engaged, the contributors offer essential scholarship for the years to come. -Eric Gidal, author of Ossianic Unconformities: Bardic Poetry in the Industrial Age An ambitious and exhilarating collection. It takes the Anthropocene debates well beyond their familiar terrain. The book will appeal to readers from a host of disciplines, from geology to history, geography, and literary studies. -Rob Nixon, author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor A rich collection of essays, their span befitting the scale and diversity of an Earth being transformed. Ranging as it does from the crowded present into deep time, where the most immediate and personal of human stories intermesh with planetary narrative, Anthropocene Reading is a deeply thought-provoking volume. -Jan A. Zalasiewicz, author of The Goldilocks Planet: The Four Billion Year Story of Earth's Climate Though responding to a single challenge, the essays vary immensely, but it is pleasant to see all contributors thinking creatively and tentatively, sometimes driven to the esoteric extremes from which only critical neologisms can rescue them. The experiment is interesting and obviously relevant for critical theory in a changing world. -G. D. MacDonald, Choice Anthropocene Reading demonstrates why the era of what some are also calling the 'Great Acceleration' reaches into and affects so many fields, sciences, and disciplines. -Jonathan Hahn, Sierra Though responding to a single challenge, the essays vary immensely, but it is pleasant to see all contributors thinking creatively and tentatively, sometimes driven to the esoteric extremes from which only critical neologisms can rescue them. The experiment is interesting and obviously relevant for critical theory in a changing world. --G. D. MacDonald, Choice Anthropocene Reading demonstrates why the era of what some are also calling the 'Great Acceleration' reaches into and affects so many fields, sciences, and disciplines. --Jonathan Hahn, Sierra Elaborating on Dipesh Chakrabarty's linking of human and earth history in the Anthropocene, the editors frame this scintillating volume by asserting that we humans now read our 'transformative presence in the Earth's strata, ' that is, paradoxically both changing and interpreting the Earth's structures. Skills for textual analysis are thus crucial. With ecocritical voices debating the possibilities--and horrors--of the Anthropocene, Anthropocene Reading is a major contribution to ecocriticism and a delight to read. --Heather I. Sullivan, Trinity University The hypothesis of the Anthropocene as forwarded by earth scientists registers a moment of ecological crisis and an unavoidable challenge to critical and historical practice in literary studies. This collection of experimental forays meets that challenge with radical--and welcome--new approaches to the archives of the human age. Both erudite and engaged, the contributors offer essential scholarship for the years to come. --Eric Gidal, author of Ossianic Unconformities: Bardic Poetry in the Industrial Age A rich collection of essays, their span befitting the scale and diversity of an Earth being transformed. Ranging as it does from the crowded present into deep time, where the most immediate and personal of human stories intermesh with planetary narrative, Anthropocene Reading is a deeply thought-provoking volume. --Jan A. Zalasiewicz, author of The Goldilocks Planet: The Four Billion Year Story of Earth's Climate An ambitious and exhilarating collection. It takes the Anthropocene debates well beyond their familiar terrain. The book will appeal to readers from a host of disciplines, from geology to history, geography, and literary studies. --Rob Nixon, author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor Author InformationTobias Menely is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Davis, and the author of The Animal Claim: Sensibility and the Creaturely Voice. Jesse Oak Taylor is Associate Professor of English at the University of Washington in Seattle and the author of The Sky of Our Manufacture: The London Fog in British Fiction from Dickens to Woolf. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |