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© 2019. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.

Abstract

[...]the operation of scale-framing at three levels-critically at a naive individual level, culturally or historically, which is the most employed scale-framing level in literary criticism, and hypothetically at the impersonal scale at which ecological dynamics become noticeable-are not mutually exclusive but can be contradictory. (101) The review finds the author's characterization of the emergence of unconscious aspects that come into being at the third scale reading and which brings an "unframing" effect upon other familiar scales, leading to the need to rethink the place of the human being in relation to nature (104) a very pertinent insight. [...]he marks the negative significance of the third scale reading of the "Elephant", beyond the ethical or political framework: "a kind of non-anthropic irony deranges the short story as an easily assimilable object of any given kind of moral or political reading" (106-7). If extrapolated, the scalar reading of the "Elephant," shows also what the 'ecophobia' in Simon Estok's reading of the seventeenth century texts of Shakespeare would mean today, given the more complicated scale effects in the epoch of the Anthropocene: "an antipathy, dismissive stance or sheer indifference towards the natural environment, including attitudes which, however understandable in the past, tend now in the emergent contexts of the Anthropocene to become directly or indirectly destructive, even in ways that may not have been the case before." [...]in the ninth chapter, he construes the problem of anthropological trap in the discourse of climate change in the aesthetic realm of ecocriticism due to the deep addiction to certain kind of psychological narrative structures jeopardizing the very purpose of its producing such literary work.

Details

Title
Ecocriticism on the Edge: The Anthropocene as a Threshold Concept
Author
Deepak, P
Pages
69-71
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Mar 2019
Publisher
Ratnabali Publishers
e-ISSN
23498064
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2238494413
Copyright
© 2019. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.