Lexington Books
Pages: 186
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-4985-1397-5 • Hardback • October 2016 • $103.00 • (£79.00)
978-1-4985-1398-2 • eBook • October 2016 • $97.50 • (£75.00)
Matthew J.C. Cella is associate professor of English at Shippensburg University.
Introduction: The Ecosomatic Paradigm in American Literature
Matthew J. C. Cella
Part I: Ecosomatic Approaches to Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century American Fiction
1. Claiming the Land: Fictions of Wholeness in Hope Leslie
Amanda Stuckey
2.Does Disability Have a Place in Utopia?: Cross-Cultural Possibilities Melville’s Typee
Elizabeth S. Callaway
3.Willa Cather’s Ambivalent Pastoralism Revisited: Disability and Environmental Ethics in O Pioneers!
Matthew J. C. Cella
Part II: Ecosomatic Approaches to American Popular Culture
4. Frank Miller’s Daredevil: Blindness, the Urban Environment, and the Social Model of Disability
James J. Donahue
5. Contesting Boundaries of “Natural” Embodiment and Identity in Young Adult Literature
Phoebe Chen
6. The Metaphor of the Cattle Chute in Temple Grandin’s Books
Katherine Lashley
Part III: Ecosomatic Readings of American Places
7. “The whole imprisoning wasteland beyond”: Forces of Nature, Ableism, and Suburban Dis-ease in Midcentury Literature
Jill E. Anderson
8. A Disability Studies Analysis of Rust Belt Narratives
Barbara George
In Disability and the Environment in American Literature the essays stage a veritable coup on our longstanding history of reading disability solely through exclusionary encounters with the built (urban) environment. Rather than situating disabled bodies as passively imprinted surfaces, Cella's volume cultivates a more proactive relationship that meaningfully explores how materiality (our vulnerable, fleshy corporeality) actively inscribes the world around it. This work is so necessary in deepening the recent turn to analyses of productive embodiment now surfacing in disability studies and its intersection with environmental studies.
— David Mitchell, George Washington University