Modernism and Its Environments

Modernism and Its Environments
Author: Michael Rubenstein,Justin Neuman
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 207
Release: 2020-06-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781350076044

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Modernism and Its Environments surveys new developments in modernist studies inspired by ecocriticism and the environmental humanities. Taking a fresh view of familiar topics in modernist studies such as the city, this book also introduces new topics and perspectives on modernism, such as: nature and wilderness; conservation and preservation; energy and fuel; waste and pollution; the animal and the human; and weather and climate. Ecocritical and environmentalist approaches have fundamentally altered our understanding of both modernism and the field of modernist studies. This book accounts for the transformation, and offers readers a host of resources with which to continue exploring and rethinking. Covering a wide range of writers and artists including Edvard Munch, Paul Valéry, Robert Musil, A.A. Milne, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, J.R.R. Tolkien, Richard Wright, Elizabeth Bishop, Ralph Ellison, Olafur Eliasson, Zadie Smith, and Kate Tempest,

The Ecology of Modernism

The Ecology of Modernism
Author: Joshua Schuster
Publsiher: University of Alabama Press
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2015-10-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780817358297

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The Ecology of Modernism explores the unexpected absence of an environmental ethic in American modernist and avant-garde poetics, given its keen concern with an environmental aesthetic, and explains why American modernism was never green. Examining the relationships of key modernist writers, poets, and musicians to nature, industrial development, and pollution, Joshua Schuster posits that the curious failure of modernist poets to develop an environmental ethnic was a deliberate choice and not an inadvertent omission.

Rethinking Modernism and the Built Environment

Rethinking Modernism and the Built Environment
Author: Almantas Samalavičius
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2017-06-23
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781443878692

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This volume is a passionate scholarly inquiry focused on some of the most pressing issues confronting contemporary architectural practice, urbanism, and city-making. Presented in the form of conversations with leading architects, urbanists, and internationally renowned architectural historians and urban thinkers, this concise book reviews and critiques the legacy of Modernism and its impact on global urbanisation. Timely, thoughtful and thought-provoking, these conversations, conducted by the editor during the last few years, urge the rejection of some of the most widespread dogmas and often dangerously limiting and misguided intellectual legacies of urban and architectural thinking. The contributors recommend a search instead for more enlightened architectural practices, urban planning, and city-making in the new millennium, when environmental problems have become particularly pressing. In this volume, readers will find not only glimpses into possible urban futures, but a thorough review of what now often appear as the shackles of the not-so-distant Modernist past.

Exhausted Ecologies

Exhausted Ecologies
Author: Andrew Kalaidjian
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2020-01-23
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781108477918

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Modern literature and environmentalism combined ecology, psychology, and aesthetics to restore communal well-being to the United Kingdom after world war.

Eco Modernism

Eco Modernism
Author: Jeremy Diaper
Publsiher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2022-11-17
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781949979862

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In drawing together contributions from leading and emerging scholars from across the UK and America, Eco-Modernism offers a diverse range of environmental and ecological interpretations of modernist texts and illustrates that ecocriticism can offer fresh and provocative ways of understanding literary modernism.

British Modernism and the Anthropocene

British Modernism and the Anthropocene
Author: David Shackleton
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2023-08-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780192857743

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British Modernism and the Anthropocene: Experiments with Time assesses the environmental politics of modernism in relation to the idea of the Anthropocene--a proposed geological epoch in which humans have fundamentally changed the Earth System. The early twentieth century was marked by environmental transformations that were so complex and happened on such great scales that they defied representation. Modernist novelists responded with a range of innovative narrative forms that started to make environmental crisis on a planetary scale visible. Paradoxically, however, it is their failures to represent such a crisis that achieve the greatest success. David Shackleton explores how British modernists employed types of narrative breakdown--including fragmentation and faltering passages devoid of events--to expose the limitations of human schemes of meaning, negotiate the relationship between different scales and types of time, produce knowledge of ecological risk, and register various forms of non-human agency. Situating modernism in the context of fossil fuel energy systems, plantation monocultures, climate change, and species extinctions, Shackleton traces how H.G. Wells, D.H. Lawrence, Olive Moore, Virginia Woolf, and Jean Rhys undertook experiments with time in their novels that refigure history and the historical situations into which they were thrown. Ultimately, British Modernism and the Anthropocene shows how modernist novels provide rich resources for rethinking the current environmental crisis, and cultivating new structures of environmental care and concern.

Vernacular Modernism

Vernacular Modernism
Author: Maiken Umbach,Bernd-Rüdiger Hüppauf
Publsiher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 0804753431

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Vernacular Modernism advocates a rethinking of the importance of the vernacular as part of the modernist discourse of place, from art to literature, from architectural to social practice.

Modernism and the Anthropocene

Modernism and the Anthropocene
Author: Jon Hegglund,John McIntyre
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2021-09-27
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781498555395

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Modernism and the Anthropocene explores twentieth-century literature as it engages with the non-human world across a range of contexts. From familiar modernist works by D.H. Lawrence and Hart Crane to still-emergent genres like comics and speculative fiction, this volume tackles a series of related questions regarding how best to understand humanity’s increasing domination of the natural world.