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Ecocriticism and cultural ecology
pp. 253-258
Abstract
One of the most significant developments in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century has been the emergence of ecocriticism as a new transdisciplinary paradigm in literary and cultural studies. In a most general sense, ecocriticism represents a response of the humanities to the environmental crisis which modern civilization has brought about in its uncontrolled economic and technological expansionism. In addition to categories like class, race, gender, ethnicity, or sexuality, nature (together with related terms such as environment, place, earth, planet) has become a central category of cultural studies—albeit a strangely hybrid category located somewhere between world and text, realist concept and discursive construct.
Publication details
Published in:
Middeke Martin, Müller Timo, Wald Christina, Zapf Hubert (2012) English and American studies: theory and practice. Stuttgart, Metzler.
Pages: 253-258
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-476-00406-2_18
Full citation:
Zapf Hubert (2012) „Ecocriticism and cultural ecology“, In: M. Middeke, T. Müller, C. Wald & H. Zapf (eds.), English and American studies, Stuttgart, Metzler, 253–258.