Caribbean Literature and the Environment:
Between Nature and Culture |
Edited by Elizabeth M. DeLoughrey,
Renée K. Gosson, and George B. Handley |
| 320 pages, 6 x 9 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2373-5 $59.50 |
| Paper ISBN 0-8139-2372-7 $22.50 |
| New World
Studies |
 |
Table of Contents
Perhaps there is no other region in the world that has been more
radically altered in terms of human and botanic migration, transplantation,
and settlement than the Caribbean. Theorists such as Edouard Glissant
argue that the dialectic between Caribbean “nature”
and “culture,” engendered by this unique and troubled
history, has not heretofore been brought into productive relation.
Caribbean Literature and the Environment redresses this
omission by gathering together eighteen essays that consider the
relationship between human and natural history. The result is
the first volume to examine the literatures of the Caribbean from
an ecocritical perspective in all language areas of the region.
In its exploration of the relationship between nature and culture,
this collection focuses on four overlapping themes: how Caribbean
texts inscribe the environmental impact of colonial and plantation
economies; how colonial myths of edenic and natural origins are
revisioned; what the connections are between histories of biotic
and cultural creolization; and how a Caribbean aesthetics might
usefully articulate a means to preserve sustainability in the
context of tourism and globalization. By creating a dialogue between
the growing field of ecological literary studies, which has primarily
been concerned with white settler narratives, and Caribbean cultural
production, especially the region’s negotiation of complex
racial and ethnic legacies, these essays explore the ways in which
the history of transplantation and settlement has provided unique
challenges and opportunities for establishing a sense of place
and an environmental ethic in the Caribbean.
The volume includes an extensive introduction by the editors
and essays by Antonio Benítez-Rojo, Derek Walcott, Wilson
Harris, Cyril Dabydeen, Helen Tiffen, Hena Maes-Jelinek, and Lizabeth
Paravisini-Gebert, among others, as well as interviews with Walcott
and Raphaël Confiant. It will appeal to all those interested
in Caribbean, literary, and ecocritical studies.
Elizabeth M. DeLoughrey is Assistant Professor
of English at Cornell University. Renée K. Gosson
is Assistant Professor of French and Francophone Studies at Bucknell
University. George B. Handley is Associate Professor
of the Humanities at Brigham Young University and author of Postslavery
Literatures in the Americas: Family Portraits in Black and White.