Ecosickness in Contemporary U.S. Fiction
eBook - ePub

Ecosickness in Contemporary U.S. Fiction

Environment and Affect

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Ecosickness in Contemporary U.S. Fiction

Environment and Affect

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Table of contents
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About This Book

The 1970s brought a new understanding of the biological and intellectual impact of environmental crises on human beings. As efforts to prevent ecological and bodily injury aligned, a new literature of sickness emerged. "Ecosickness fiction" imaginatively rethinks the link between these forms of threat and the sick body to bring readers to environmental consciousness.

Tracing the development of ecosickness through a compelling archive of contemporary U.S. novels and memoirs, Ecosickness in Contemporary U.S. Fiction establishes that we cannot comprehend environmental and medical dilemmas through data alone and must call on the sometimes surprising emotions that literary metaphors, tropes, and narratives deploy. In chapters on David Foster Wallace, Richard Powers, Leslie Marmon Silko, Marge Piercy, Jan Zita Grover, and David Wojnarowicz, Heather Houser shows how narrative affects such as wonder and disgust organize perception of an endangered world and orient us ethically toward it.

The study builds the connective tissue between contemporary literature, ecocriticism, affect studies, and the medical humanities. It also positions ecosickness fiction relative to emergent forms of environmentalism and technoscientific innovations such as regenerative medicine and alternative ecosystems. Houser models an approach to contemporary fiction as a laboratory for affective changes that spark or squelch ethical projects.

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Table of contents

  1. Cover 
  2. Series Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents 
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. 1. Ecosickness
  9. 2. AIDS Memoirs Out of the City: Discordant Natures
  10. 3. Richard Powers’s Strange Wonder
  11. 4. Infinite Jest’s Environmental Case for Disgust
  12. 5. The Anxiety of Intervention in Leslie Marmon Silko and Marge Piercy
  13. Conclusion: How Does It Feel?
  14. Notes
  15. Works Cited
  16. Index