Call for Submissions
Ecocriticism and Narrative Theory: Essays at a Critical Confluence
We seek submissions for a volume that asks what
connections exist between material environments and narrative forms of
understanding. Scholars are increasingly drawing our attention to the
importance of the stories we tell each other about
the environment, such that narratives have become an implicit
touchstone for the emerging field of the environmental humanities. This
work positions narratives as important occasions and repositories for
the values, political and religious ideas, and sets
of behaviors that determine how we perceive and interact with our
ecological homes. Changing the way we interact with the environment,
scholars such as Val Plumwood and Ursula Heise suggest, requires new
stories about the world in which we live.
Yet despite this connection, scholarship that puts into dialogue two of the relevant
schools of literary criticism—narrative theory and ecocriticism—is
scant. Despite the fact that both of these approaches to the study
of literature and culture are well established, they appear to have
said little to one another; Narrative, the flagship journal of narrative theory, has never featured a special issue focusing on the environment in narratives, and ISLE,
the flagship
journal of ecocriticism, has never featured a special issue exploring
the role that narrative structures play in representations of the
environment. After organizing well-attended and generative panels on
possible intersections at the Association for the Study
of Literature and the Environment (ASLE) 2013 and the International
Society for the Study of Narrative (ISSN) 2014, the co-editors for this
volume feel confident that interest abounds for a collection that
bridges the work done by scholars in these subfields
of literary study.
If these conversations remain in their infancy, is
not because the two approaches lack overlapping interests. On the
contrary, opportunities for cross-pollination abound. The vocabulary
developed by narratologists could benefit certain
ecocritical studies, especially in helping ecocritical scholars better
account for the formal aspects of representations of environment in
various types of narratives (novels, short stories, films, etc).
Ecocritical insights could help to broaden narrative
theory, particularly in strengthening the connection between text and
extratextual world of interest to many postclassical narratologists and
expanding the repertoire of questions narrative theorists ask of
narratives. Also, both of these approaches have complicated
the disciplinary or methodological line(s) between science and
humanistic inquiry; can they learn from one another’s attempts? More
broadly, how might an approach to reading that combines ecocritical and
narratological lenses sophisticate the way we think
about narratives within the environmental humanities? What new insights
might ecocritical and narratological lenses provide to conversations
within the environmental humanities? The co-editors are confident that
both approaches can learn from the other but
feel this multi-voiced collection would give momentum to questions of
how.
Possible topics under consideration in this collection include but are not limited to:
-Access to nature alongside/versus access to narrative
-Animals as characters
-Chronotopes
-Evolutionary approaches to narrative/“evocriticism”
-Gendered/ecofeminist approaches to narrating natural experience
-Heteroglossia and the natural sciences
-Lyric narrative and forms of nature writing
-Mimesis and diegesis
-Narration, expectation, and natural experience
-Narrative and/as environmental rhetoric
-Narrative and ecocentrism
-Narrative and/of space or place
-Narrative as mediator of natural events (journalism, nature, and narrative)
-“Natural” and “Unnatural” narrative
-Natural disaster as plot device, deus ex machina
-New environmental narratives
-Pathetic fallacy as narratorial strategy
-Person and narration (first, third; omniscient, restricted) and nonhuman narrators and focalizers
-Referentiality and political context
-Role of nature in indigenous forms of narrative
-Spatialization and temporality in narrative
-Storyworlds as virtual environments
Please submit a 250-300 word abstract of your proposed chapter contribution and a short bio-blurb by e-mail to Erin James (ejames@uidaho.edu) and Eric Morel (egmorel@uw.edu)
by January 15, 2015. Also include the working title of your chapter, 3–5 keywords, and the names and contact details for all authors.
Final chapters of 6,000 – 7,000 words will be due September 30, 2015.
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