Lexington Books
Pages: 278
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-3476-5 • Hardback • November 2017 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-3477-2 • eBook • November 2017 • $122.50 • (£95.00)
Robert Bell is the director for learning resources and writing across the curriculum at Loyola University New Orleans.
Robert Ficociello is assistant professor of writing at Holy Family University.
ForewordPatrick MurphyIntroduction Robert Bell and Robert FicocielloPart I: MediationChapter 1: “For $19.99, Terror at the Finish Line Can Be Yours!”: Creating Individual Identity Through Collective Tragedy in the Boston Marathon BombingsAmy LantingaChapter 2: Re-Telling Fukushima, Re-Shaping Citizenship: Women Netizens in JapanNicole L. FreinerChapter 3: The Locals do it better? The Strange Victory of Occupy SandyPeer IllnerChapter 4: “Monsters in Human Form:” Representations of Looting in American Disaster NarrativesCharles BylerChapter 5: The Deepwater Horizon Disaster: Communicating Environmental Disaster in the Age of TechnologyKristen Chamberlain and Marceleen MosherChapter 6: “The storm of the century”: Typhoon Yolanda, the Event, and the Project of U.S. Empire in the PhilippinesDanielle CrawfordPart II: RemediationChapter 7: “The Missing Element is the Human Element”: Ontological Difference and the World-Ecological Crisis of the CapitaloceneKirk BoyleChapter 8: Challenging Developmentalist Narratives: Helon Habila’s Oil on Water as a Representation of the Extractivist Exploitation in the Niger Delta RegionMinna NiemiChapter 9: A Random Harvest: The Leftovers, Debt, and the “strange non-death” of NeoliberalismLiane TanguayChapter 10: Appropriating the Zombie Apocalypse: The Politics of DisasterErik TrumpChapter 11: The Politics of Aesthetics in Beasts of the Southern Wild:Mapping the Ethical Limits of Filmic Narratives in the Wake of Epochal Disaster CyclesStephanie HankinsonChapter 12: Neohumanism in the Anthropocene: Jim Jarmusch’s Only Lovers Left AliveHannah Stark
What does ecocriticism have to say about crises as diverse as the Boston Marathon bombing, the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear catastrophe, and the ecological and social devastation caused by oil exploitation in the Niger Delta? Read this book and find out. This fascinating and insightful volume joins the growing number of ecocritical projects exploring risk, meaning, resistance, and recovery in the contexts of natural and technological disaster. Eco Culture is a valuable and timely collection.
— Scott Slovic, Oregon Research Institute
Robert Bell and Robert Ficociello’s Eco Culture: Disaster, Narrative, Discourse affirms the importance of narrative resistance to the prevalent discursive and material forms of oppression accompanying ecological disasters. Challenging the mainstream and often manipulative disaster narratives written from within neoliberal capitalist ideologies, the contributors in this volume seek alternative narrative paths for understanding the complex issues of disaster cultures: slow violence, resilience, vulnerability, crime, militarism, systems of control, colonialist practices, technological mastery, socio-emotional traumas, adaptive politics, socio-economic decay, and more. Since each chapter enacts 'narrative responsibility' as a strategy of resistance to the hegemonic discourses of human-induced ecological disasters, this volume will be enormously attractive for those who care about environmental issues.
— Serpil Oppermann, Professor of English, Hacettepe University, and President of EASLCE