Ecospatiality: A Place-Based Approach to American Literature

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Ecospatiality explores modern and contemporary American prose literature through the lens of place, showing how authors like William Least Heat-Moon, Willa Cather, Richard Wright, and Leslie Marmon Silko represent and reimagine real places in the world and the human-environment relationships therein. Building on the work of scholars in geography, sociology, ecocriticism, and geocriticism, this book articulates the theory of ecospatiality: an understanding of place as simultaneously spatial, ecological, and historical. In our current historical moment, which is characterized by ongoing ecological collapse and a not-unrelated increase in social disorder, few issues are more urgent than the human relationship with our environments. Whether we characterize this new epoch as the climate change era or the Anthropocene, we can no longer ignore the fact that the places we live are rapidly changing in response to economic and environmental pressures. Rather than thinking of place as a neutral site for social interaction, we should recognize how it underpins and intertwines with human experience. Fortunately, literature can help us think through how place operates. Lowell Wyse shows that texts can be understood as works of literary cartography. Focusing on works of nonfiction and fiction whose primary settings are on the North American continent, Ecospatiality demonstrates how these narratives rely on realistic literary geography to invoke, and sometimes retell, important aspects of environmental history within particular communities and bioregions.

Author(s): Lowell Wyse (author)
Series: (New American Canon)
Edition: 1
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 260
Tags: Literary Criticism, Literary Theory, American Literature, Ecospatiality, Spatial Criticism, Ecocriticism

Contents
Acknowledgments
1. Orientation/Ecospatiality and Literary Criticism
2. The Production of Place/William Least Heat-Moon’s Ecospatial Literary Cartography
3. Ecospatiality at the Crossroads/Mapping Central New Mexico in Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop, Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony, and Ana Castillo’s So Far from God
4. The World-Brain and the Watershed/The Spatiality of John Steinbeck’s Environmental Vision
5. Plotting and Reckoning/The Geography of Injustice in Richard Wright’s Native Son
Afterword. An Ethical Orientation
Notes
Bibliography
Index