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[Commlist] CfC – The Literary Journalist as Naturalist
Tue Apr 07 16:03:43 GMT 2020
Call for Contributions from Pablo Calvi at SUNY Stoneybrook, who is
editing a collection on "The Literary Journalist as Naturalist".
Deadline for proposed chapters is end-April. His address is
<(pablo.calvi /at/ stonybrook.edu)>
Here is a summary:
* * * *
Nature --or perhaps the way modern capitalism objectifies and destroys
nature-- is the topic of our time. It has, thus, been the at the core of
an extensive list of long form journalistic narratives in the past
century and has spun hundreds more in the past decade. With the
narrative of the Green New Deal as a background, the May, 2018 United
Nation report about a million species at risk of extinction due to human
activity, and the unstoppable increase in global temperatures as a
result of human activity, matched with the inaction and incapacity of
world governments to stop this process, “The Literary Journalist as
Naturalist” aims at compiling a thorough, academically entertaining and
comprehensive snapshot of long journalistic narratives about nature in a
time of drastic change.
Bill McKibben, Rebecca Solnit, John McPhee, Carl Safina, Elizabeth
Kolbert, David Wallace-Wells, some of the names you will read about in
this anthology, followed the visionary steps of Rachel Carson, the
pioneering environmental journalist and picked up the mantle delivering
the harrowing narratives of our dire times.
By discussing the multiple ways in which narrative journalism has
portrayed nature, our interactions with it, and our politics towards it
for decades, maybe even centuries, this anthology will try to give an
academic framework for these narratives of finality, finitude, atonement
and conquest, which reached a crucial point of self-awareness in 1962
with Carson’s masterpiece, /Silent Spring/.
These narratives not only deal with the environment considered as an
object removed from us, humanity. They re-insert men and women into
nature, and show how our cultures act as one of nature’s many agents.
The text aims to be international in focus and innovative in its
approach. New areas of research will be not only welcomed but encouraged.
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