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The literature of waste : material ecopoetics and ethical matter / Susan Signe Morrison.

Van Pelt Library PN51 .M676 2015
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Morrison, Susan Signe, 1959-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Literature and society.
Refuse and refuse disposal in literature.
Waste (Economics) in literature.
Consumption (Economics) in literature.
Recycling (Waste, etc.).
Ecocriticism.
Excess (Philosophy).
Physical Description:
xi, 330 pages ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
New York : Palgrave Macmillan, [2015]
Summary:
"Establishing the field of Waste Studies, a material ecocritical approach, The Literature of Waste traces literal and figurative waste in the western canon. The materiality of waste - as in landfills, trashcans, garbage dumps, compost piles - inevitably transforms into metaphor. Waste emerges out of various disciplines, such as anthropological codification, psychological repression of bodily decay, sociological civilizing process, historical garbaging of the past, economic conspicuous consumption, urban disposal of bodily waste, religious sin, and philosophical angst. Vibrant materialism disturbs the use of the metaphor of waste used to characterize people as disposable garbage. If we can read waste as possessing dynamic agency, how might that change the ethics of refuse-ing and ostracizing wasted humans? Poets, the ragpickers of litter-ature, cure homeopathically. Waste, Compost, and Gleaning Aesthetics acknowledge the poignancy of materiality by revealing the humanity we share. "-- Provided by publisher.
"Tracing the presence of material and metaphoric waste in the western canon, Morrison, arguing within a material ecocritical approach, proposes an ethical paradigm by which waste, compost, and gleaning aesthetics in poetry homeopathically heal"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Machine generated contents note:
Introduction: The Waste-ern Literary Canon in the Waste-ern Tradition
PART I: TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL: APPROACHES TO DISCIPLINING WASTE
1. Codification: The Anxiety of Ambiguity
2. The Fragmented and Corruptible Body: Gendered Waste
3. The Civilizing Process: Divisive Divisions
4. Memory and Narrative: Ruins, Nostalgia, and Ghosts
5. Failed Source Reduction: Conspicuous Consumption and the Inability to Minimize
6. Urban Myths: The Civilized and Pristine City-Body
7. Interiorized Waste: Sin and Metaphysical Meaninglessness
8. The Toxic Metaphor of Wasted Humans: Those Filthy Cleaners Who Scrub Us Spotless
PART II: ENERGY RECOVERY AND THE DYNAMIC POWER OF THINGS
9. The Secret Life of Objects: The Audacity of Thingness and the Poignancy of Materiality
10. Trash Meditation: The Arts of Transience and Proximity
PART III: RECYCLING AND COMPOSTING: FORM AS RESTITUTION
11. Waste Aesthetics: Puns, Litter-ature, and Intertextuality
12. Gleaning Aesthetics: Poetry as Communal Salvage
PART IV: SOURCE REDUCTION AND REUSE: COMPASSION THROUGH GENEROUS METAPHOR
13. Compost Aesthetics: The Poet[h]ics of Metaphor
14. Poetry as Homeopathy: The Poet as Ragpicker.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9781137405661
113740566X
OCLC:
899488136

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