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Writing in Dust

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Writing in Dust is the first sustained study of prairie Canadian literature from an ecocritical perspective. Drawing on recent scholarship in environmental theory and criticism, Jenny Kerber consid...
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  • 17 March 2011
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Writing in Dust is the first sustained study of prairie Canadian literature from an ecocritical perspective. Drawing on recent scholarship in environmental theory and criticism, Jenny Kerber considers the ways in which prairie writers have negotiated processes of ecological and cultural change in the region from the early twentieth century to the present.
The book begins by proposing that current environmental problems in the prairie region can be understood by examining the longstanding tendency to describe its diverse terrain in dualistic terms—either as an idyllic natural space or as an irredeemable wasteland. It inquires into the sources of stories that naturalize ecological prosperity and hardship and investigates how such narratives have been deployed from the period of colonial settlement to the present. It then considers the ways in which works by both canonical and more recent writers ranging from Robert Stead, W.O. Mitchell, and Margaret Laurence to Tim Lilburn, Louise Halfe, and Thomas King consistently challenge these dualistic landscape myths, proposing alternatives for the development of more ecologically just and sustainable relationships among people and between humans and their physical environments.
Writing in Dust asserts that “reading environmentally” can help us to better understand a host of issues facing prairie inhabitants today, including the environmental impacts of industrial agriculture, resource extraction, climate change, shifting urban–rural demographics, the significance of Indigenous understandings of human–nature relationships, and the complex, often contradictory meanings of eco-cultural metaphors of alien/invasiveness, hybridity, and wildness.

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Price: $41.99
Pages: 295
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Imprint: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Series: Environmental Humanities
Publication Date: 17 March 2011
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781554583065
Format: Paperback
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This is the right book at the right time. Writing in Dust convincingly demonstrates the importance of including the arts in discussions of sustainability. Jenny Kerber's scholarship, sensitive and rigorous, rereads familiar texts in fresh ways and makes the field of prairie literary scholarship newly relevant.
Jenny Kerber teaches in the areas of Canadian and American literature, literary theory, and environmental criticism in the Department of English at the University of Toronto. Her essays on Canadian literary and environmental topics have appeared in Canadian Poetry, Canadian Literature, Essays on Canadian Writing, and Green Letters. This is her first book.

Table of Contents for Writing in Dust: Reading the Prairie Environmentally by Jenny Kerber
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. “This soil is rich”: Reading the Environment in the Early Prairie Novel
Chapter 3. How Do You Grow a Nature Writer? The Prairie Nature Memoir
Chapter 4. Unsettling the Prairie: The Ecological Poetries of Tim Lilburn, Louise Halfe, and Madeline Coopsammy
Chapter 5. “We’re just getting started”: Storytelling as Environmental Work in Green Grass, Running Water, Sweeter Than All the World, and The Diviners
Chapter 6. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index