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Linda Hogan and Contemporary Taiwanese Writers

eBook - An Ecocritical Study of Indigeneities and Environment, Ecocritical Theory and Practice
ISBN/EAN: 9781498521635
Umbreit-Nr.: 2120074

Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 176 S.
Format in cm:
Einband: Keine Angabe

Erschienen am 16.12.2015
Auflage: 1/2015


E-Book
Format: EPUB
DRM: Adobe DRM
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  • Zusatztext
    • <span><span>Linda Hogan and Contemporary Taiwanese Writers: an Ecocritical Study of Indigeneities and Environment</span><span> is the first full length single-authored study of Native American writer Linda Hogan and the first book to address Hogans poetry and prose primarily from ecocritical perspectives (inclusive of ecofeminism, environmental justice, postcolonial ecocriticism, and animal studies). It also is unique for the reason that it is a comparative study of the work of Hogan and writings by Taiwanese environmental writers, scholars, and activists. Chapter One, which serves as the introduction to the book, written by and from the perspective of an indigene, begins by giving readers a glimpse into the kind of world in the east in which the author came of age. It then relates this world to the western worlds that Hogan writes about in her poetry and prose. Chapter Two focuses on Hogans most recently published novel,</span><span>People of the Whale</span><span> (2008), and on the arguments that the novel makes about the environmentally unsustainable acts of corporate globalization that involve the trade in endangered animal species. Huang relates those arguments to the oil industry in Taiwan and to the extirpation of cetacean species in the waters of Taiwan by this industry. Chapter Three is an analysis of the novel</span><span>Mean Spirit</span><span> (1990). Huang reads this novel mostly through the lens of environmental justice arguments. Chapter Four addresses the novel</span><span>Solar Storms</span><span> (1995) from the perspective of ecofeminist theory and in the context of the issue of the escalation of mega-dams in East Asia. Chapter Five analyses the novel</span><span>Power</span><span> from animal studies perspectives. Chapter Six is a comparative studies reading of poems by several prominent Chinese, Taiwanese, and Aboriginal poetsTaiwanese poet Ka-hsiang Liu, Paiwan poet Mona Neng, Atayal poet Walis Nokan, and Chinese-Taiwanese poet Guangzhong Yuand Hogans latest collection of poetry, entitled</span><span>Dark. Sweet: New& Selected Poems</span><span> (2014). In his reading of this work, Huang relies on a definition of ecopoetry in Ann Fisher-Wirth and Laura-Gray Streets recently published</span><span>The Ecopoetry Anthology</span><span> (2013). He also brings together the main theoretical ecocritical terms that he discusses in the previous chapters.</span></span>
  • Kurztext
    • <span>This book forges links between an author whose work belongs to indigenous literature, Native American literature, and Taiwanese literature. It does so by focusing on content that critically relates to the work of ecocritics, ecofeminists, ecojustice scholars, postcolonial ecocritics, and animal studies scholars.</span>
  • Autorenportrait
    • <span><span>Peter I-min Huang is associate professor of English at Tamkang University.</span></span>