Poetry and the Anthropocene
Work detail
"This book is about the way shifting conceptions of ecology, biology and technology significantly alter what it means to write poetry about nature in a time of environmental crisis. It offers a radical re-reading of three major British poets, Ted Hughes, Derek Mahon and JH Prynne, and their aesthetic strategies for negotiating the complex feedbacks between organisms and their environments in a technological world. Their poetry not only provides ways of thinking and communicating about ecology and biology, but shows how the unpredictable processes of thought and communication impact on organic life in the Anthropocene, providing a substantial challenge to aesthetics, ethics and politics"--
Overview
Shared work-level identity and catalog context.
Contributors
People credited with this work in the active catalog.
- Open Author
Sam Solnick
Editions
Publication-specific versions linked to this work only.
- PAPoetry and the AnthropoceneSam Solnick
Poetry and the Anthropocene
- PAPoetry and the AnthropoceneSam Solnick
Poetry and the Anthropocene
- PAPoetry and the AnthropoceneSam Solnick
Poetry and the Anthropocene
- PAPoetry and the AnthropoceneSam Solnick
Poetry and the Anthropocene
- PAPoetry and the AnthropoceneSam Solnick
Poetry and the Anthropocene
- PAPoetry and the AnthropoceneSam Solnick
Poetry and the Anthropocene