Lexington Books
Pages: 236
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-4985-9537-7 • Hardback • June 2019 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-9538-4 • eBook • June 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Victor K. Mendes is associate professor of Portuguese, director of the PhD program in Luso-Afro-Brazilian studies and theory, and director of the Center for Portuguese Studies and Culture/Tagus Press at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth.
Patrícia Vieira is associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, comparative literature, and film and media studies at Georgetown University and associate research professor at the Center for Social Studies (CES) at the University of Coimbra.
Introduction
Chapter 1. A Portuguese Approach to the Environmental Crisis
Chapter 2. Environment, Nature and Landscape: Conceptual Affinities and Distinctions in the Portuguese Context
Chapter 3. Inter-, Multi- and Trans-Disciplinarity: New Horizons for Portuguese Environmental History
Chapter 4. Elemental Portugal
Chapter 5. “Songs of Stance”
Chapter 6. Portuguese Environmental Perceptions of Brazil in the Sixteenth Century
Chapter 7. Nature’s Literary Lessons: Júlio Dinis on Literature and the Environment
Chapter 8. “On Borrowed ‘Women’s Time’: Ecological Female Bodies and the Re-Engendering of Nature in Eça de Queirós’s A Cidade e as Serras”
Chapter 9. Hunters of Empire: João Teixeira de Vasconcelos’s Colonial Memoirs of African Hunting
Chapter 10. Environmentalizing Fernando Pessoa's Modernism
Chapter 11. The Posthuman Poetry of Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen
Chapter 12. The Environment and José Saramago’s Literary Program in Journey to Portugal.
In Pursuit of Portugal’s History and Culture
Mendes and Vieira have collected 12 essays on Portuguese authors and the presence and influence of environmental features in their works. Ranging from medieval lyrical poetry to 19th- and 20-century authors, the collection includes essays on Júlio Dinis (1839–71), Eça de Queirós (1845–1900), Fernando Pessoa (1888–1935), Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen (1919–2004), and José Saramago (1922–2010). Two essays extend to hunting in colonial Africa and 16th-century descriptions of Brazil by Caminha and Gandavo. As the introduction notes, environmental research is still in its initial stages, lacking clear distinctions between images of nature, features of geographical location such as the sea, or images of animals, plants, and landscape in literature. A central question is whether nature, as common literary theme and context, can have an enhanced meaning when recast as environment.
Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
An invitation to read anew many of the works that make up the canon of Portuguese literature, Portuguese Literature and the Environment represents the first concerted attempt to call attention to the ways in which literary representations create as much as are created by the natural environment in the horizon of which they emerge. Framed by brilliant philosophical and historical overviews of the state of the matter in present day Portugal, the ecocriticism that follows urges the question of how the local environment might have had global impact across the ages.
— Ana Paula Ferreira, University of Minnesota
A tour de force, this volume brings together reflections that span centuries and a marvelous range of materials. The critical approaches are as rich and varied as the literatures and environments that they engage. This is a timely and often brilliant book, and it should appeal to readers far and wide.
— Bruno Carvalho, Harvard University