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Toward an Environmental Imagination of Displacement in Contemporary Transnational American Poetry
Rauscher, Judith (2016): Toward an Environmental Imagination of Displacement in Contemporary Transnational American Poetry, in: Robert T. Tally Jr., Christine M. Battista, Christine M. Battista, u. a. (Hrsg.), Ecocriticism and Geocriticism : Overlapping Territories in Environmental and Spatial Literary Studies, Basingstoke ; New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, S. 189–206, doi: 10.1057/9781137542625.
Faculty/Chair:
Author:
Title of the compilation:
Ecocriticism and Geocriticism : Overlapping Territories in Environmental and Spatial Literary Studies
Editors:
Battista, Christine M.
Publisher Information:
Year of publication:
2016
Pages:
ISBN:
978-1-349-55914-5
Series ; Volume:
Language:
English
Abstract:
"Toward an Environmental Imagination of Displacement" adopts a postcolonial-ecocritical perspective in examining how contemporary North American poetry attempts to negotiate issues of place and displacement. Analyzing poems that go beyond the merely unidirectional trajectory of many narratives of migration (i.e., those moving from displacement to passage to arrival), this article focuses on works that exemplify a transnational poetics. In particular, it looks at the Kashmiri-American poet Agha Shahid Ali and Caribbean poet Derek Walcott, demonstrating the ways in which their poems are investing in concrete places and natural environments. The paper argues that these poets speak against those theories of displacement that overemphasize deterritorialization and instead attempt to define a language capable of describing the complex relationship between displaced persons and the natural world.
Keywords: ; ; ; ;
American Poetry
Displacement
Place
Nature
Ecocriticism
International Distribution:
Yes:
Type:
Contribution to an Articlecollection
Activation date:
August 18, 2016
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https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/40836