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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Aidan TynanPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press ISBN: 9781474443364ISBN 10: 1474443362 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 31 May 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"This is a fantastic book, one that challenges and indeed moves the reader on virtually every page. It is worth reading for this alone--the sense one has, while reading it, of being in the presence of a brilliant mind moving from one original, well-crafted idea to the next. [...] Tynan's achievement is nonetheless considerable: the book is an important contribution not only to the humanities but also to broader debates around how we might avoid the worst of the catastrophic ecological scenarios that are already at play.--Cory Stockwell ""symplokē"" What does it mean for environmental criticism when the environments that form the touchstone of that criticism are disappearing? Tynan answers this by deploying the idea of the desert, through which he explores our ontological condition in the Anthropocene. This is a compelling argument, in an erudite and intelligent book.--Adeline Johns-Putra, Reader in English Literature, University of Surrey Reading Aidan Tynan's The Desert in Modern Literature and Philosophy: Wasteland Asthetics, one is tempted to rewrite Deleuze's statement that ""The plane of Immanence is entirely made up of light' as 'The plane of Immanence is made up entirely out of sand'. Photondust. Tynan's Deleuzian, and to a lesser degree Heideggerian deserts are twofold spaces, at once arid and invigorating. Are our libidinal oases fata morganas in the zero-intensity dunes of the schizophrenic body, or are the deserts' ungrounding sands fata morganas that shimmer through the wasted Ballardian spaces of capital? In beautiful, intricate superpositions of philosophy and literature, Tynan assembles an extended desert koan, in which both propositions are equally true. If I were to be stranded in a desert, or find myself lying on a deserted, terminal beach (that normally benign, heterotopic microdesert) I would hope to have Tynan's book by my side as an indispensable philosophic meditation, conceptual tool-box and literary treasure-trove, as well as, of course, a to provide a little patch of shade.--Hanjo Berressem, University of Cologne" Author InformationAidan Tynan, Senior Lecturer in English Literature, Cardiff University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |