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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://asiair.asia.edu.tw/ir/handle/310904400/7097


    Title: Globalisation and an Ecological Narrative of Kuanying Mountain
    Authors: Iris Ralph
    Contributors: 淡江大學英文學系
    Date: 2009-12-16
    Issue Date: 2010-01-08 03:16:06 (UTC+0)
    Publisher: 亞洲大學外國語文學系
    Abstract: The argument of this paper addresses the recent turn in the literary movement of
    environmental studies, also known as “ecocriticism” and “green studies,” away from the
    spaces of formal textual inquiries towards places threatened by globalisation processes
    that made these spaces possible at the outset. It begins with a brief examination of the
    concepts of “place” and “space” as they are discussed in ecoscholar Lawrence Buell’s
    most recent writing The Future of Environmental Criticism. It makes an analogy between
    “space” according to Buell’s definition of this term and the late 20th century and early 21st
    century phenomenon of globalisation to claim that if ecocritical scholars have been well
    served by globalisation insofar as it has given us geographically and physically unbound
    “spaces” wherein we can access products, goods and services including information in
    library archives and stacks thousands of miles from us, the crisis of global warming asks
    us to be responsive to and responsible for, in environmentally-minded ways, the places
    that are physically and geographically much closer to us and that are primarily
    nonhuman-made (ecogenic), so-called natural as opposed to primarily human-made
    (anthropogenic) “built” environments. It asks us to devote some of the uxorious aesthetic
    and imaginative spaces available to us, to learning, teaching, thinking and writing about
    the local ecogenic environments of the places we live in, and, occasionally at the very
    least, to leaving these spaces in order to engage more with and to protecting those
    ecogenic places.
    Relation: 2009第三屆『全球化』與華語文敘述國際學術研討會 2009-12-16~19:208
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures] Proceedings

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