The Ecocriticism Reader
: a
LANDMARKS IN LITERARY ECOLOGY
Edited by Cheryl Glotfelty and Harold Fromm
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS @ ATHENS AND LONDON ©{© 1996 by the University of Georgia Press
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“Some Principles of Ecocritcism” © 1995 by William Howarth
“The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction” © 1986 by Ursula K. Le Guin
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Includes bibliographic reeences and index
oa ppe) =n 0-803 78-0
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T cle, Chel Fromm, Harold
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CONTENTS
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: Literary Studies in an Age of Environmental Crisis
CHERYLL GLOTFELTY
part one Ecotheory: Reflections on Nature and Culture
3
“The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis
LYNN WHITE, J
15
‘Nature and Silence
CHRISTOPHER MANES
»
From Transcendence to Obsolescence: A Route Map
HAROLD FROMM
40
Cultivating the American Garden
FREDERICK TURNERst
‘The Uses of Landscape: The Picturesque Aesthetic and
the National Park System
ALISON BYERLY
69
Some Principles of Ecocriticism
WILLIAM HOWARTH
9
Beyond Ecology: Self, Place, and the Pathetic Fallacy
NEIL EVERNDEN,
105
Literature and Ecology: An Experiment in Ecocriticism
WILLIAM RUECKERT
14
‘The Land and Language of Desire: Where Deep Ecology
and Post-Structuralism Meet
SUEELLEN CAMPBELL
137
‘American Literary Environmentalism as Domestic Orientalism
DAVID MAZEL
Part two Ecocritical Considerations of Fiction and Drama
49
‘The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction
URSULAK. LE GUIN
155
‘The Comic Mode
JOSEPH W. MEEKER
CONTENTS + wi
ayo
Unearthing Herstory: An Introduction
ANNETTE KOLODNY
182
Speaking a Word for Nature
SCOTT RUSSELL SANDERS
196
‘The Postnatural Novel: Toxic Consciousness in Fiction of the 1980s,
CYNTHIA DEITERING
204
Is Nature Necessary?
DANA PHILLIPS
ParT THREE Critical Studies of Environmental Literature
225
Revaluing Nature: Toward an Ecological Criticism
GLEN A. LOVE
24t
‘The Sacred Hoop: A Contemporary Perspective
PAULA GUNN ALLEN
264
Landscape, History, and the Pueblo Imagination
LESLIE MARMON SILKO
276
‘A Taxonomy of Nature Writing
THOMAS J. LYON
2B
Indexing American Possibilities: The Natural History Writing
of Bartram, Wilson, and Audubon
MICHAEL BRANCHwil + CONTENTS
393
Desert Solitaire: Counter-Friction to the Machine in the Garden
DON SCHEESE
BS
Heroines of Nature: Four Women Respond to the American Landscape
VERA L. NORWOOD
ast
Nature Writing and Environmental Psychology.
‘The Interiority of Outdoor Experience
scort sLovic
a7
‘The Bakhtinian Road to Ecological Insight
MICHAEL J. MCDOWELL
Recommended Reading 393,
Periodicals and Professional Organizations 40x
Contributors 403
Index 409
PREFACE
‘One day late in the 1980s an unsolicited packet arrived in the mail that
was radically to alter my professional life as a literary scholar-critic and
to have repercussions in my private life as well. The contents consisted
of a form letter and bibliography from a Cornell graduate student in En-
glish named Cheryll Burgess. She was finishing up a dissertation on three
American women writes, but her most intense interest seemed to be the
anything: but-apparent connection between literature and the environment.
Her plane were ambitious, nor to say grandiose: to pursue an interest in
‘ecology while remaining a literary professional, o promulgate the concep
tion of “ecocriticism” while producing an anthology of ecocritical essays,
and formally to become the first American professor of literature and the
environment.
The bibliography contained more than two hundred essays and books
that bore some relation to the idea of ecocriticism, but even more useful
‘was the potential mailing list it provided of authors who might be of some
assistance in producing the ecocritical anthology. Writing to most of them,
CCheryll Burgess described her aims, included a copy of the bibliography,
and waited for replies—which soon began to pour in. One result of this
large-scale operation was that I found myself agreeing to serve as chief as-
sistant, although not without some unease that with most of the hard and
creative work already done I would emerge in the role of an unearned bene-
ficiary of someone else’s groundbreaking labors. Although I have helped
‘to make some decisions and discovered a number of essays to include, this
preface gives me the opportunity to disclaim major status.
{As things turned out, much more than Cheryll Burgess Glotfelty’s origi-
nal aims have been realized. She has in fact promulgated an awarenessair © ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
‘William Rueckert, “Literature and Ecology: An Experiment in Ecocriicism.” From
the Iowa Review 9. (Winter 1978): 71-86. Reprinted by permission of the lowa
Review and the author.
Scott Russell Sanders, “Speaking a Word for Nature.” From Secrets of the Uni
verse by Score Russell Sanders. © 1991 by Scort Russell Sanders. Reprinted by
permission of Beacon Press.
Don Scheese, “Desert Solitaire: Counter-Friction to the Machine in the Garden.”
From North Dakota Quarterly 59.2 (Spring 1991): 211-27. Reprinted by permis:
sion of North Dakota Quarterly and the author.
Leslie Marmon Silko, “Landscape, History, and the Pueblo Imagination.” From
‘Antacus $7 (Autumn 1986): 85-94. © 1986 by Leslie Marmon Silko. Reprinted
by permission of the author, her agent Sara Chalsant, and Wylie, Aitken and
Stone Incorporated,
Seort Slovic, “Narure Writing and Environmental Psychology: The Interiority of
‘Outdoor Experience.” Adapted from the introduction to Seeking Awareness in
American Nature Writing: Henry Thoreau, Annie Dillard, Edward Abbey, Wen-
dell Berry, and Barry Lopez. © 1992 by the University of Utah Press. Used by
permission ofthe University of Utah Press.
Frederick Turner, “Cultivating the American Garden.” From Rebirth of Value:
“Meditations on Beauty, Ecology, Religion, and Education by Frederick Turner. ©
1991 by the State University of New York. Reprinted by permission of the State
University of New York Press.
Lynn White, Je, “The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis.” From Science
135.3767 (10 March 1967): 1203-7. © AAAS. Reprinted by permission of the
‘American Association for the Advancement of Science.
CHERYLL GLOTFELTY
Introduction
or
LITERARY STUDIES IN AN
AGE OF ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS
Literary studies in our postmodern age exist in a state of constant flux.
Every few years, it seems, the profession of English must “redraw the
boundaries” co “remap” the rapidly changing contours of the field. One
recent, authoritative guide to contemporary literary studies contains a full
twenty-one essays on different methodological or theoretical approaches
to criticism. Its introduction observes:
Literary studies in English are in a period of rapid and sometimes disori-
‘enting change. .. Just as none of the critical approaches that antedate this
period, from psychological and Marxist criticism to reader-response theory
land cultural criticism, has remained stable, so none of the historical fields
‘and subfields that constitute English and American literary studies has been
left untouched by revisionist energies. ... [The essays in this volume] dis-
‘lose some of those places where scholarship has responded to contemporary
pressures!
Curiously enough, in this putatively comprehensive volume on the state
of the profession, there is no essay on an ecological approach to literature.
‘Although scholarship claims to have “responded to contemporary pres:
sures,” it has apparently ignored the most pressing contemporary issue of
all, namely, the global environmental crisis. The absence of any sign of
an environmental perspective in contemporary literary studies would seem
to suggest that despite its “revisionist energies,” scholarship remains aca-
demic in the sense of “scholarly tothe point of being unaware of the outside
world” (American Heritage Dictionary).wt + CHERYLL GLOTFELTY
If your knowledge of the outside world were limited to what you could
infer from the major publications of the literary profession, you would
quickly discern that race, class, and gender were the hot topics of the late
‘wentieth century, but you would never suspect thatthe earth’s life support
systems were under stress. Indeed, you might never know that there was
an earth at all. In contrast, if you were to scan the newspaper headlines of
the same period, you would learn of oil spills, lead and asbestos poison-
ing, toxic waste contamination, extinction of species at an unprecedented
rate, battles over public land use, protests over nuclear waste dumps, a
growing hole in the ozone layer, predictions of global warming, acid rain,
loss of topsoil, destruction of the tropical rain forest, controversy over
the Spotted Owl in the Pacific Northwest, a wildfire in Yellowstone Park,
‘medical syringes washing onto the shores of Atlantic beaches, boycotts
fon tuna, overtapped aquifers in the West, illegal dumping in the East, a
nuclear reactor disaster in Chernobyl, new auto emissions standards, fam-
ines, droughts, floods, hurricanes, a United Nations special conference on
‘environment and development, a U.S. president declaring the 1990s “the
decade of the environment,” and a world population that topped five bil-
lion. Browsing through periodicals, you would discover that in 1989 Time
‘magarine’s person of the year award went to “The Endangered Earth.”
In view of the discrepancy between current events and the preoccupa-
tions of the literary profession, the claim that literary scholarship has re-
sponded to contemporary pressures becomes difficult to defend, Until very
recently there has been no sign that the institution of literary studies has
even been aware of the environmental crisis. For instance, there have been
‘no journals, no jargon, no jobs, no professional societies or discussion
‘groups, and no conferences on literature and the environment. While re-
lated humanities disciplines, like history, philosophy, law, sociology, and
religion have been “greening” since the 19705, literary studies have ap.
parently remained untinted by environmental concerns. And while social
‘movements, like the civil rights and women’s liberation movements of the
sixties and seventies, have transformed literary studies, it would appear
that the environmental movement of the same era has had litle impact.
But appearances can be deceiving, In actual fact, a the publication dates
for some of the essays in this anthology substantiate, individual literary
and cultural scholars have been developing ecologically informed criticism
and theory since the seventies; however, unlike their disciplinary cousins
mentioned previously, they did not organize themselves into an identifi-
INTRODUCTION + at
able group; hence, theie various efforts were not recognized as belonging
to a distinct critical school or movement. Individual studies appeared in a
wide variety of places and were categorized under a miscellany of subject
headings, such as American Studies, regionalism, pastoralism, the frontier,
‘human ecology, science and literature, nature in literature, landscape in lit-
erature, or the names of the authors treated. One indication of the disunity
of the early efforts is that these critics rarely cited one another's works
they didn’t know that it existed. In a sense, each critic was inventing an
environmental approach to literature in isolation. Each was a single voice
howling in the wilderness. As a consequence, ecocriticism did not become
a presence in the major institutions of power in the profession, such as
the Modern Language Association (MLA). Graduate students interested in
environmental approaches to literature felt like misfits, having no commu-
nity of scholars to join and finding no job announcements in their area of
expertise.
BIRTH OF ENVIRONMENTAL LITERARY STUDIES
Finally, in the mid-eightics, as scholars began to undertake collaborative
projects, the field of environmental literary studies was planted, and in
the early nineties it grew. In 1985 Frederick O. Waage edited Teaching
Environmental Literature: Materials, Methods, Resources, which included
course descriptions from nineteen different scholars and sought to foster
“a greater presence of environmental concern and awareness in literary
disciplines."? In 1989 Alicia Nitecki founded The American Nature Writ-
ing Newsletter, whose purpose was to publish brief essays, book reviews,
classroom notes, and information pertaining to the study of writing on
nature and the environment. Others have been responsible for special envi-
ronmental issues of established literary journals? Some universities began
to include literature courses in their environmental studies curricula, a few
inaugurated new institutes or programs in nature and culture, and some
English departments began to offer a minor in environmental literature. In
1990 the University of Nevada, Reno, created the first academic position
in Literature and the Environment.
‘Also during these years several special sessions on nature writing or
‘environmental literature began to appear on the programs of annual lit-
erary conferences, perhaps most notably the 1991 MLA special sessionoll + CHERYL GLOTFELTY
organized by Harold Fromm, entitled “Ecocriticism: The Greening of Lit-
rary Studies,” and the x992 American Literature Association symposium
chaired by Glen Love, entitled “American Nature Writing: New Contexts,
New Approaches.” In 1992, at the annual meeting of the Western Litera:
ture Association, a new Association for the Study of Literature and En-
viconment (ASLE) was formed, with Scott Slovic elected first president.
ASLE's mission: “to promote the exchange of ideas and information per-
taining to literature that considers the relationship between human beings
and the natural world” and to encourage “new nature writing, traditional
and innovative scholarly approaches to environmental literature, and inter-
disciplinary environmental research.” In its first year, ASLE’s member-
ship swelled to more than 300; in its second year that number doubled, and
the group created an electronic-mail computer network to facilitare com-
‘munication among members; in its thicd year, 1995, ASLE’s membership
had topped 750 and the group hosted its first conference, in Fort Collins,
Colorado. In 2993 Patrick Murphy established a new journal, ISLE: Inter-
disciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, to “provide a forum
for critical studies of the literary and performing arts proceeding from or
addressing environmental considerations. These would include ecological
theory, environmentalism, conceptions of nature and their depictions, the
human/nature dichotomy and related concerns.”*
By 1993, then, ecological literary study had emerged as a recognizable
critical school. The formerly disconnected scattering of lone scholars had
joined forces with younger scholars and graduate students to become a
strong interest group with aspirations to change the profession. The origin
of ecocriticism as a critical approach thus predates its recent consolidation
by more than twenty years.
DEFINITION OF ECOCRITICISM
What then is ecocriticism? Simply put, ecocriticism is the study of the
relationship between literature and the physical environment. Just as feri-
nist criticism examines language and literature from a gender-conscious
Perspective, and Marxist criticism brings an awareness of modes of pro-
duction and economic class to its reading of texts, ecocriticism takes an
carth-centered approach to literary studies.
Ecocritics and theorists ask questions like the following: How is nature
INTRODUCTION + atx
represented in this sonnet? What role does the physical setting play in the
plot of this novel? Are the values expressed in this play consistent with
ecological wisdom? How do our metaphors of the land influence the way
wwe treat it? How can we characterize nature writing asa genre? In addition
to race, class, and gender, should place become a new critical category? Do
‘men write about nature differently than women do? In what ways has lit-
ceracy itself affected humankind’s relationship to the natural world? How
hhas the concept of wilderness changed over time? In what ways and to
what effect is the environmental crisis seeping into contemporary litera-
ture and popular culture? What view of nature informs U.S. Government
reports, corporate advertising, and televised nature documentaries, and t0
‘what rhetorical effect? What bearing might the science of ecology have
‘on literary studies? How is science itself open to literary analysis? What