Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-8476-8319-2 • Hardback • September 1996 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-0-8476-8320-8 • Paperback • September 1996 • $62.00 • (£48.00)
Lowell Edmunds is professor of classics at Rutgers University.
Chapter 1 List of Illustrations. Acknowledgments. Introduction: Geography, Philosophy, and the Environment
Chapter 2 On the Ethical Determination of Geography: A Kantian prolegomenon
Chapter 3 Nature Presence: Reflections on Healing and Domination
Chapter 4 The Taking Clause and the Meanings of Land
Chapter 5 Muslim Contributions to Geography and Environmental Ethics: The Challenges of Comparison and Pluralism
Chapter 6 The Dialectical Social Geography of Eliseè Reclus
Chapter 7 The Maintenance of Natural Capital: Motivations and Methods
Chapter 8 Wilderness Management
Chapter 9 Mead and Heidegger: Exploring the Ethics and Theory of Space, Place, and the Environment
Chapter 10 Critical Reflections on Biocentric Environmental Ethics: Is It an Alternative to Anthropocentrism?
Chapter 11 Ecology, Modernity, and the Intellectual Legacy of the Frankfurt School
Chapter 12 Critical Questions in Environmental Philosophy
Chapter 13 Index
In sum, Edmunds offers a theoretically sophisticated vision of post-modern Sophocles; I have learned much from this book.
— New England Classical Journal
A specialized and challenging study.
— Clfton Kreps, Truman State University, Kirksville, MO; Religious Studies Review, Vol. 24 No. 3 / July 1998
To what extent is the meaning of a historically remote text anchored to the past? In this provocative new historical reading of Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus, Edmunds explores the archaeology of meaning from the suggestive vantage point of a classicist fully at home with the major issues of contemporary critical theory.
— Michael Issacharoff, University of Western Ontario
Edmunds' approach to the Oedipus at Colonus. makes this an important book for students and scholars of semiotics, Greek tragedy, and theatrical performance.