Environmental Postcolonialism


A Literary Response

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Edited by Shubhanku Kochar, Anjum Khan, Contributions by Shubhanku Kochar, Anjum Khan, Suzy Woltmann, Anupama Nayar, Stephen Ogheneruro Okpadah, Kalpana Bora Barman, Humaira Riaz, Anik Sarkar
Imprint:
LEXINGTON BOOKS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 161 mm
Weight:
370 g
Pages:
240

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Description

Shubhanku Kochar is assistant professor at University School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, Delhi.



M. Anjum Khan is assistant professor of English in Avinashilingam Institute for Home Science and Higher Education for Women, Coimbatore.


Chapter 1: Introduction by Shubhanku Kochar and M. Anjum Khan



Chapter 2: "Transformation is the Rule of Life": Environment and the Search for Utopia in The Hungry Tide by Suzy Woltmann



Chapter 3: Cultural Nationalism and Sacred Groves of Kerala by Anupama Nayar



Chapter 4: Politics, Oil and Theatre in Africa by Stephen Ogheneruro Okpadah



Chapter 5: Through the Postcolonial Lens: Reading the Environment in Narratives from India’s North East by Kalpana Bora Barman



Chapter 6: “Aesthetics of Belonging”: Construction of a Postcolonial Landscape in Daud Kamal’s Poetry by Humaira Riaz



Chapter 7: I am a Tree Leaning: Neo-colonialism, Eco-consciousness and the Decolonized Self in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing by Anik Sarkar



Chapter 8: For Appearances Must Deceive: Misreading the Environment in Days and Nights in the Forest and its Cinematic Adaptation by Chinmaya Lal Thakur



Chapter 9: Postcolonial Ecology and Representation: Exploring ‘Ashani Sanket’ as an Eco-Film by Neepa Sarkar



Chapter 10: Land, Labor, and Family: The Impact of US Colonization on Puerto Rico in Esmeralda Santiago’s When I Was Puerto Rican by Renée Latchman



Chapter 11: ‘Coloniality’ of Humans and the Ecology: An Eco-critical Reading of Shubhangi Swarup’s Latitudes of Longing by Risha Baruah



Chapter 12: Women and Power: Digital Cameras in Postcolonial Caribbean Spaces in Literature by Denise M. Jarrett



Chapter 13: Nature and Resistance in Coetzee And Abani: The Transcoporeal In African Fiction by Puja SenMajumdar



Chapter 14: Colonialism, Capitalism and Nature: A Study of Alex Haley’s Roots and Ngũgĩ wa Thiongo’s Petals of Blood by Shivani Duggal



Chapter 15: Beyond the Dichotomy of Humans and Animals: Situating Ecology in Coetzee’s Writings by Bipasha Mandal



Chapter 16: Provincializing Ecocriticism: Postcolonial Ecocritical Thoughts and Environmental-Historical Difference by Animesh Roy



About the Contributors


To skeptics, "environmental postcolonialism" may seem like odd cognates, reflecting the desperate scramble of scholarly and scientific disciplines to appear green. Ostensibly, a prefix (environmentalism) is all it takes to do so. This collection of superb scholarship, however, rises far above this fad, arguing that ecocriticism in former colonies chronicles the ways in which colonialists robbed them of nature and culture.... The collection features 16 well-researched and well-written essays by early-career and established scholars. It encompasses environmental postcolonial scholarship from across Africa, the Americas, and Asia, and is equally diverse in its topical treatment, covering natural resources, place-based identities, gendered ecology, eco-consciousness, and capitalist predation of nature. In short, Environmental Postcolonialism makes a memorable contribution to an eponymous field, and to the literature on ecocriticism and postcolonial theory. Highly recommended.

— Choice Reviews



Environmental Postcolonialism is a must read for those interested to know more about the intersection and intermeshing of ecocriticism and postcolonial studies. Drawing on a wide range of insights from across the world, the book delves into how colonialism devastated nature and environment as much as it destroyed the human component of former colonies. This is a much-needed critical intervention that investigates the epistemes of colonial legacy that became synonymous with the destruction of the world around us. A thought-provoking collection!

— Sami Ahmad Khan, author of Aliens in Delhi, Red Jihad, and Star Warriors of the Modern Raj



Environmental Postcolonialism: A Literary Response is a extraordinary volume containing sixteen chapters written by seventeen different writers. The merit of the book lies in the multiplicity of literary narratives undertaken for applying the concept of environment and postcolonialism. In fact, it is one of the pioneer texts in the interdisciplinary concept of environment and postcolonialism. The book is an essential read for the students and scholars of Humanities, Literature, Social Sciences and their kind.

— Santhosh Bahadur Singh, Lady Irwin College Delhi University


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