Strange Natures: Futurity, Empathy, and the Queer Ecological Imagination

$27.00
by Nicole Seymour

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In Strange Natures , Nicole Seymour investigates the ways in which contemporary queer fictions offer insight on environmental issues through their performance of a specifically queer understanding of nature, the nonhuman, and environmental degradation. By drawing upon queer theory and ecocriticism, Seymour examines how contemporary queer fictions extend their critique of "natural" categories of gender and sexuality to the nonhuman natural world, thus constructing a queer environmentalism. Seymour's thoughtful analyses of works such as Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues, Todd Haynes's Safe, and Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain illustrate how homophobia, classism, racism, sexism, and xenophobia inform dominant views of the environment and help to justify its exploitation. Calling for a queer environmental ethics, she delineates the discourses that have worked to prevent such an ethics and argues for a concept of queerness that is attuned to environmentalism's urgent futurity, and an environmentalism that is attuned to queer sensibilities. ASLE Ecocriticism Book Award, Association for the Study of Literature and Environment, 2015. "This lively study engages with and extends important emerging themes in queer theory and ecocriticism. Engagingly written and intricately argued, Strange Natures demonstrates an exemplary practice of queer ecological reading." --Catriona Sandilands, professor, faculty of environmental studies, York University, Toronto "Seymour specifically sets the queer ecology--which is a developing field, not an established one--apart from certain historical aspects of queer theory.  The compelling case studies extend "new queer cinema" aesthetics toward environmental politics and consider queer theory's links to nonhuman life and the problematic term "nature."  Highly recommended."-- Choice " Strange Natures demonstrates the ongoing vitality of queer ecology. . . . Inspiring criticism."-- Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment "A groundbreaking book, one that carefully traces the barriers to such work (namely, queer theory's vexed relationship to 'nature' and the two fields' ostensibly conflicting relationships to the status of futurity) in order to develop a queer ecocritical practice that engages, rather than resists, such difficulty… Seymour's text limns the contours of the possible, demonstrating how a queer ecological politics intersects with, emerges from, and necessitates engagement with other pressing projects of our time."-- American Studies   Strange Natures  won the 2015 Book Award for Ecocriticism from the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment. Nicole Seymour is an assistant professor of English at California State University, Fullerton. Her articles have appeared in venues such as Cinema Journal , Transgender Studies Quarterly, and the collection Moving Environments: Affect, Emotion, Ecology, and Film (ed. Alexa Weik von Mossner). She has received several grants and fellowships, including a 2013-14 Carson Fellowship from the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society in Munich, Germany.  

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