- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
Planting the Anthropocene is a rhetorical look into the world of industrial tree planting in Canada that engages the themes of nature, culture, and environmental change. Bringing together the work of material ecocriticism and critical affect studies in service of a new materialist environmental rhetoric, Planting the Anthropocene forwards a frame that can be used to work through complex scenes of anthropogenic labor.
Using the results of interviews with seasonal Canadian tree planters, Jennifer Clary-Lemon interrogates the complex and messy imbrication of nature-culture through the inadequate terminology used to describe the actual circumstances of the planters' work and livesâand offers alternative ways to conceptualize them. Although silvicultural workers do engage with the limiting rhetoric of efficiency and humanism, they also make rhetorical choices that break down the nature-culture divide and orient them on a continuum that blurs the boundaries between the given and the constructed, the human and nonhuman. Tree-planting work is approached as a site of a deep-seated materialityâa continued re-creation of the land's "disturbance"ârather than a simplistic form of doing good that further separates humans from landscapes.
Jennifer Clary-Lemon's view of nature and the Anthropocene through the lens of material rhetorical studies is thoroughly original and will be of great interest to students and scholars of rhetoric and composition, especially those focused on the environment.
Frequently asked questions
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Inventing the Anthropocene
- 1. Nature, Wilderness, and the Environment: How Humanism and Efficiency Construct the Nature-Culture Divide
- 2. A New Materialist Environmental Rhetoric: Rhetorical Bodies in Relation
- 3. Affect and Intense Rhetorics: The Stickiness of Persuasive Entanglements
- 4. Persuasive Movement: The Rhetoricity of Things
- Conclusion: From Anthropocene to Choracene: The Power of a New Materialist Environmental Rhetoric for Staying with the Trouble
- Appendix
- References
- About the Author
- Index