Selected Product: | Ecocriticism (New Critical Idiom) Paperback Edition: 1 Author: Greg Garrard Publisher: Routledge Release Date: 2004-08-24 ISBN-10: 0415196922 ISBN-13: 9780415196925 List Price: $21.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology ISBN-10: 0820317810 ISBN-13: 9780820317816 List Price:$24.95 Writing for an Endangered World: Literature, Culture, and Environment in the U.S. and Beyond ISBN-10: 0674012321 ISBN-13: 9780674012325 List Price:$23.00 The Green Studies Reader: From Romanticism to Ecocriticism ISBN-10: 0415204070 ISBN-13: 9780415204071 List Price:$41.95 The Future of Environmental Criticism: Environmental Crisis and Literary Imagination (Blackwell Manifestos) ISBN-10: 1405124768 ISBN-13: 9781405124768 List Price:$26.95 The Truth of Ecology: Nature, Culture, and Literature in America ISBN-10: 019513768X ISBN-13: 9780195137682 List Price:$99.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Ecocriticism (New Critical Idiom) by Greg Garrard (ISBN-10: 0415196922, ISBN-13: 9780415196925). At this time we have not yet written a review for Ecocriticism (New Critical Idiom) by Greg Garrard (ISBN-10: 0415196922, ISBN-13: 9780415196925). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This volume offers one of the first introductory guides to the emergent field of literary ecological criticism. With an accessible and animated approach to the subject, Greg Garrard presents the reader with the theoretical background of the genre and explores the practice of ecocriticism in key areas of cultural production. Topics covered include: *Wilderness *Apocalypse *Dwelling *Animals *Earth. Featuring a comprehensive glossary of terms and suggestions for further reading, ecocriticism is the ideal handbook for all students new to the burgeoning disciplines of literature and environment studies, ecology and green studies. A great resource | Customer Rating: | This is one of the best New Critical Idiom titles: well-organized, clearly written, balanced and thoughtful, both comprehensive and comprehensible. If you need an introduction to the field of ecocriticism, this is the best place to start.
Contrary to what the previous reviewer claims, the book has well-informed discussions of both Christianity (in a chapter on Apocalypse, where he contrasts millenialist visions of the end of the world with Augustine's "comic" (i.e. unpredictable) eschatology) and of various eco-feminist and deep-ecological ideas of the Great Mother. Garrard is a generous reader, but does not hesitate to point out excesses and contradictions. His distinction between "problems in ecology" (which call for scientific analysis) and "ecological problems" (requiring social and cultural understanding) is worth the price of the book. | very fine introduction, with two teeny blemishes | Customer Rating: | I got this book not expecting much. As I've seen it the ecocriticism field is just as rotten through with poor thought as most fields of literary criticism. But the book turned out to puncture many ecopieties and call into question almost every preconception but two.
One is that Christianity is destructive of the earth. Yes, he left that unquestioned on the table. The earth is a gift from God so to not respect it or to trash it as this book implies is just purely wrong for Christians.
Second, that matriarchy is a good thing. The notion of a primitive matriarchy that preexisted patriarchy is shaky and based on wish-fulfillment. The very definition of matriarchy is hard to pin down, and doesn't turn out to mean anything. Feminist scholars have turned the idea upside down and inside out and find that it's largely a 70s feminist idea that is based purely on the essentialism of that era.
But those are small blemishes. The prose is sharp, and the ideas are otherwise fairly sound throughout the book. There is a great bibliography, and many new ideas. It is also fairly simple and easy to read. I only had to look up one word.
I recommend this book to anyone who would like an overview of ecocriticism. Not only does this book provide that, it provides a fairly sound drubbing to most of ecocriticism. At 20 dollars this book is a very sound investment. It's probably the best book of literary criticism I've read in a long time. I'm glad I have it. I'm going to read it two or three times. The mind here is playful and expansive and erudite. Couldn't ask for anything more. |
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