Eco Criticism
Eco Criticism
Eco Criticism
PRESENTED BY:
AISHA ASLAM
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Definition:
Ecocriticism is the study of literature and the
environment from an interdisciplinary point of view,
where literature scholars analyze texts that illustrate
environmental concerns and examine the various
ways literature treats the subject of nature. Some
ecocritics brainstorm possible solutions for the
correction of the contemporary environmental
situation, though not all ecocritics agree on the
purpose, methodology, or scope of ecocriticism.
(Wikipedia)
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Origin of Ecocriticism:
It is necessary to make it clear as to its origin. In fact, globally
speaking, literature itself originates from our love of listening and
telling stories. This love of man to stories is based onto the
richness of Mother Nature in things that fascinate and seduce
physically and inspire man with new perspectives to look at the
physical setting of everything they do.
Ecocriticism emerged as a study of the relationship between
literature and the natural environment in the mid-1990s.
Ecocriticism is a term derived from Greek oikos and kritis. "Oikos"
means "household," a nexus of humans, nature and the spirit.
"Kritis" means judge, "the arbiter of taste who wants the house
kept in good order (Howarth 1988: 163) in all regards.
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Origin of Ecocriticism
William Rueckert may have been the first person to
use the term ecocriticism (Barry 240).
In 1978, Rueckert published an essay titled
Literature and Ecology: An Experiment in
Ecocriticism.
ASPECTS OF ECOCRITICISM
a) Ecocriticism is Interdisciplinary:
It brings knowledge from different scholarly arenas to
bear on your analysis of the same person, place, or
thing. To illustrate the above aspect, lets consider
this example: A rose can be a symbol for love. A rose is
also a woody perennial that's part of the genus Rosa. A
rose is also a royal flower. A rose can be studied from
the perspectives of philosophy, botany, and history, or
more. And that's the heart of interdisciplinarity
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b) Ecocriticism is Nature
Ecocritics get into some pretty heated arguments about what
does and doesn't qualify as nature. In so doing, they're looking
to problematize humans self-centred views of the natural
world. So, they pit two possible definitions of nature against
each other:
(i) Nature = A place where humans are notboth physically
and metaphorically speaking.
(ii) Nature = everything everywhere. All nature, all the time.
Taylor-Lautner thinks that Nature is everything in the world
that isn't man-made: grass, the sun, wolves that aren't
specifically bred by humans to be scary super-wolves.
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c) Ecocriticism is Environmentalist
Like that political movement of environmentalism,
ecocriticism also strives to make people care equally
about all creatures that live in any single
environment. In practice, any side of the
environment that is victimized by people in a way
should push be repaired as soon as possible so as to
seat that equality of human and nonhuman
individuals who should be cared about the same way.
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d) Ecocriticism is Anthropocentric
People tend to see themselves everywhere, in
everything. You will hear Man, for example say: that
leaf sure looks like my lover's hand. And that pig in
Animal Farm was my high school gym teacher. This
comparison made by man is intentionally setting for
him a place in literature, botany, zoology, and love,
which is ecocritically abusive and refutable.
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e) Ecocriticism is Ecologic
Etymologically, Eco, from the Greek oikos, means home, while
ology, the study of. So Ecology is the study of home. This
messing around with language is of less importance to this
study, nevertheless, the elements that the study essentially
refers to are also part of ecocriticism, that is, the study of how
living things interact with each other and their environments.
The illustrative terms should be the example of how mice and
frogs sometimes befriend each other in India. And the results
are positively adorable, fascinating. The relationship
described above is all what ecocriticism dreams of.
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g) Ecocriticism is science
It has been already mentioned that this theory is quite
interdisciplinary. It gets its fundamental stuff from various
domains which treat of the interaction between creatures. That is
how it is also science because it does all what any science does.
Ever since, it becomes a rigorous, empirical business that people
like you get into when they observe something about the world,
then make a hypothesis about how that thing works, and then test
their hypothesis. In the preceding lines, Henry David Thoreau has
been said to have done an adventure in the bush where he
observed growing beans and happened to produce a literary work
of fame today on the basis of the hypotheses he drew from the
natural behavior. And that was the beginning of ecocriticism.
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h) Ecocriticism is Wilderness
i) Ecocriticism is Conservative
The conservative aspect of this theory is meant by the
fact that it is a powerful tool of speech for the defence
of preserving this beautiful world we inhabit for
future generations of humans. Conservationists,
then, spend a lot of time thinking up ways to reduce
people's negative impact on the environment (which
is home to many, many species of squirrel), while
also promoting the natural order of things.
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Ecocritical Questions
What does Nature represent in the essay? Can you
interpret it within an ecocritical framework?
Which image or symbolic representation of nature
does the author construct?
What role does nature and the landscape play here?
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Ecocritical Questions
Are the values expressed in this play consistent with
ecological wisdom?
How do nature and human emotion relate to each
other in the text? How does nature affect emotions?
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Ecocritical Questions
What is the relationship between humans and the
environment in this text? Is the environment
commodified?
Do men write about nature differently than
women do?
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Ecocritical Questions
How has the concept of wilderness changed over time?
In what ways and to what effect is the environmental
crisis seeping into contemporary literature and popular
culture?
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Ecocriticism
As it now exists in the US, takes its literary
foundations from three American writers whose
work celebrates nature, the life force, and the
wilderness
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Henry David Thoreau
Annie Dillard
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The lover of nature is he whose inward and outward senses are truly adjusted to
each other; who has retained the spirit of infancy even into the era of manhood. His
intercourse with heaven and earth, becomes part of his daily food. In the presence of
nature, a wild delight runs through the man, in spite of real sorrows.
-- On Nature (1836)
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Annie Dillard
Us human-things can read texts as well with our noses and ears as we
can with our eyes and learned rationality, the ecocritic argues. All the
smells and sounds and chemicals floating around in our great books tell
us a lot about our texts and ourselves.
Let us point this point to you another way: Ecocriticism compels the
reader to filter the words on the page through our bodily senses. Smell
the orphanage from Charles Dickens's Oliver Twist Feel the oppressive
heat and humidity from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness.
Then ask yourself, dear reader, questions like: How does one's climate
influence mythology and storytelling? For example, do you think Santa
Claus makes much sense to a Zimbabwean whose house has no
chimney? Hm. These are the important questions in life, we think.
Ecocritical Analysis - Animal Farm by George Orwell
In this exciting tale, some pigs lead a revolt against a drunk
farmer who doesn't take good care of his farm. They tout the
virtues of animalism in a cool and groovy manifesto but then
the pigs become tyrants themselves.
They kill off other animals and turn human-like: they start
wearing pants, drinking alcohol, and being all-around self-
centered jerks.
But why do the ecocritics care extra much about this story?
Because Orwell's allegory isn't just about the dangers of mob
rule and fascism. It can be read as an ecological allegory as well.
You want to mess up the natural world? Act like a human being.
Rachel Carson was one of the first eco-activists of the modern
age to go deep into why our "civilized" habits are dangerous to
the lives of other species and their natural habitats. As she
says, we are "living in a world that is just not quite fatal."
Ecocriticism helps us find parallels between Carson's critique
of human ecological behavior, particularly the spreading of
pesticides, and the frightening transformation of Orwell's pigs
as they start to behave like humans.
As soon as they adopt more human-like behaviors and
aesthetics, they begin to spread fascism throughout the farm.
Twelve voices were shouting in anger, and they were
all alike. No question, now, what had happened to
the faces of the pigs. The creatures outside looked
from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig
to man again; but already it was impossible to say
which was which.
Before they turn all evil and human-like, the animals on the farm
revolt against the humans because they're treating them poorly. The
drunken Mr. Jones is not a good steward of the farm and Old Major,
the father of the animal revolution, compares humans to parasites.
Gross, but sort of true. Humans live off the meat and work of the
animal, and give very little in return. That's a pretty one-way
relationship right there.
Rachel Carson, Eco-Activist Extraordinaire, also says that humans
act like parasites. They spread out across the land, over-use the dirt to
over-produce food, and, in that process, cover Mother Earth in
harmful pesticides. So really, Orwell and Carson have got a lot in
common.
It doesn't take long before the once-revolutionary
pigs become fascists themselves. They start to drink
and play poker and enjoy the excesses of the farm
just as humans have done for a very long time. And
while these scenes do, in part, allegorize Stalin's
fascist regime, they also depict Big Agri-Business.
By applying Carson's ecological critique to Animal
Farm, we start to see the fat faces of chemical
companies and massive farm operations in those
pigs-cum-humans
Ecocritical Analysis - Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller