Poetry, Social Change & Ecological Connection
Buch, Englisch, 347 Seiten, Format (B × H): 148 mm x 210 mm, Gewicht: 466 g
ISBN: 978-981-19-4872-5
Verlag: Springer Nature Singapore
Selfie: Poetry, Social Change & Ecological Connection presents the first general theory that links poetry in environmental thought to poetry as an environment. James Sherry accomplishes this task with a network model of connectivity that scales from the individual to social to environmental practices. Selfie demonstrates how parts of speech, metaphor, and syntax extend bidirectionally from the writer to the world and from the writer inward to identities that promote sustainable practices. Selfie shows how connections in the biosphere scale up from operating within the body, to social structures, to the networks that science has identified for all life. The book urges readers to construct plural identifications rather than essential claims of identity in support of environmental diversity.
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Research
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Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Part 1: Multidirectional Writing.- Chapter 2: The Particles.- Chapter 3: Nouns and Things: Changing Their Climate.- Chapter 4: Verb Solutions Adapt.- Chapter 5: Borderlands: Am I I &They? Knowing Without Or.- Chapter 6: Syntax or How I Become What I Seem.- Chapter 7: Social Groups Scale: Identities & Connections.- Part 2: Perspectives on Combining.- Chapter 8: Social Syntax.- Chapter 9: How Can Culture Change Habitat? .- Chapter 10: Groups Build Social Syntax.- Chapter 11: Some Structures of Syntax—Parataxis & Hypotaxis.- Chapter 12: Scalable Syntax: Poetry Model of the Biosphere.- Chapter 13: The Anthropocene: Ecosystems & Time Frames.- Chapter 14: Networks of Metaphor.- Part 3: Connections Below Form in Poetry and Biology.- Chapter 15: Environmental Identities.- Chapter 16: Environmental Autobiography.- Chapter 17: Social Syntax II: Linkages & Connectors.- Chapter 18: Identity’s Constructive and Connective Ecosystem.- Chapter 19: The Condition & Hierarchy ofIdentification.- Chapter 20: Impact of Text & Environment on Another Self.