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Karen L. Kilcup - Fallen Forests: Emotion, Embodiment, and Ethics in American Women's Environmental Writing, 1781-1924 - 9780820345000 - V9780820345000
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Fallen Forests: Emotion, Embodiment, and Ethics in American Women's Environmental Writing, 1781-1924

€ 64.47
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Description for Fallen Forests: Emotion, Embodiment, and Ethics in American Women's Environmental Writing, 1781-1924 Paperback. Num Pages: 504 pages, black & white illustrations, frontispiece. BIC Classification: 1KBB; DSB. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 229 x 154 x 31. Weight in Grams: 717.

In 1844, Lydia Sigourney asserted, "Man's warfare on the trees is terrible." Like Sigourney many American women of her day engaged with such issues as sustainability, resource wars, globalization, voluntary simplicity, Christian ecology, and environmental justice. Illuminating the foundations for contemporary women's environmental writing, Fallen Forests shows how their nineteenth-century predecessors marshaled powerful affective, ethical, and spiritual resources to chastise, educate, and motivate readers to engage in positive social change.

Fallen Forests contributes to scholarship in American women's writing, ecofeminism, ecocriticism, and feminist rhetoric, expanding the literary, historical, and theoretical grounds for some of today's most pressing environmental debates. ... Read more

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Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2013
Publisher
University of Georgia Press
Condition
New
Number of Pages
512
Place of Publication
Georgia, United States
ISBN
9780820345000
SKU
V9780820345000
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-11

About Karen L. Kilcup
Karen L. Kilcup is a professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA. Her many books include Teaching Nineteenth-Century American Poetry and Soft Canons: American Women Writers and Masculine Tradition.

Reviews for Fallen Forests: Emotion, Embodiment, and Ethics in American Women's Environmental Writing, 1781-1924
Kilcup's career as a noted scholar of American women's writings is on full display in this book. Analyzing the works of nineteenth-century women writers from diverse racial, ethnic, and class backgrounds, Kilcup illuminates these writers' complex, often conflicting interactions with the natural world.
author of "Good Observers of Nature": American Women and the Scientific Study of the Natural World, ... Read more
Beautifully written, meticulously researched, and brilliantly argued, Fallen Forests is a major contribution to ecocriticism and to the study of nineteenthcentury American women writers more broadly. Kilcup's impressive expertise animates this engaging, original analysis of how canonical and noncanonical American women writers' acts of environmental representation were profoundly shaped by class, as well as by gender and race. A remarkably dexterous and insightful work of ecocritical scholarship.
editor of Reading the Roots: American Nature Writing before Walden
Unprecedented in its refusal to adhere to narrow understandings of environmental experience, Fallen Forests forges an ambitious reconsideration of environmental writing in the early United States. Kilcup unearths a wide range of women’s early engagement in issues central to environmental justice. She pursues authors’ labor status, physical ability, spiritual affiliation, and geographical location alongside critical historical events, including the early resource wars that accompanied EuroAmerican settlement of western lands, the influence of social standards that propelled the fashion industry and conspicuous consumption, and the complex relation between bodies, cultural beliefs, and geography that informed Native and Mexican American land claims. Welcome and timely, Fallen Forests reveals early America’s engagement with issues that continue to grip the nation’s environmental injustices.
author of Passions for Nature: Nineteenth-Century America’s Aesthetics of Alienation
Scholar Kilcup is clearly passionate about American women's writing, as evidenced in this meticulously researched text. . . . This book is for academic audiences, especially readers with an interest in 19th-century American literature, women's literature, and ecofeminist criticism.
Library Journal
Karen Kilcup’s Fallen Forests expands our sense of American literary en- gagement with the nonhuman world well beyond the established canon…. Kilcup identifies a more capacious tradition of ‘environmental literature’ whose primary project is not to foster ecological awareness but rather to work for environmental justice.
Environment and History
In this wide-ranging, deeply insightful book, Kilcup both extends and challenges current thinking about American women's writings about the environment in the long nineteenth century. . . . Adding to the field of rhetoric, or women's rhetoric, this book makes a valuable contribution to making 'audible' many now-forgotten women's voices.
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Goodreads reviews for Fallen Forests: Emotion, Embodiment, and Ethics in American Women's Environmental Writing, 1781-1924


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