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Shakespeare and the ­Evolution of the Human ­Umwelt
Adapt, Interpret, Mutate (Routledge Environmental Literature, Culture and Media)

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Format
Hardback, 134 pages
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Paperback : $74.97

Published
United Kingdom, 23 February 2021

Shakespeare and the Evolution of the Human Umwelt brings together research on Shakespeare, biosemiotics, ecocriticism, epigenetics and actor network theory as it explores the space between nature and narrative in an effort to understand how human bodies are stories told in the emergent language of evolution, and how those bodies became storytellers themselves.

Chapters consider Shakespeare’s plays and contemporary works, such as those of Barbara Kingsolver and Margaret Atwood, or productions for which Shakespeare is a genetic forebear, as evolutionary artefacts which have helped to shape the human umwelt—the species-specific linguistic habitat that humans share in common. The work investigates the juncture where semisphere meets biosphere and illuminates the role that narrative plays in our construction of the world we occupy. The plays of Shakespeare, as works that have had unparalleled cultural diffusion, are uniquely situated to speak to the ways in which ideas and the texts they use as vehicles are always material, always environmental, and always alive. The book discusses Shakespeare’s works as vital nodes in our cultural, historical, moral and philosophical networks, but also as environmental actors in and of themselves. Plays are presented alternately as digitally encoded bits of culture awaiting their connection to an analog world, or as bacteria interacting with living organisms in both productive and destructive ways, altering their structure and creating new meaning through movement that is simultaneously biological and poetic.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of ecocriticism looking to model ecocritical readings and bridge gaps between scientific, philosophical and literary thinking.

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Product Description

Shakespeare and the Evolution of the Human Umwelt brings together research on Shakespeare, biosemiotics, ecocriticism, epigenetics and actor network theory as it explores the space between nature and narrative in an effort to understand how human bodies are stories told in the emergent language of evolution, and how those bodies became storytellers themselves.

Chapters consider Shakespeare’s plays and contemporary works, such as those of Barbara Kingsolver and Margaret Atwood, or productions for which Shakespeare is a genetic forebear, as evolutionary artefacts which have helped to shape the human umwelt—the species-specific linguistic habitat that humans share in common. The work investigates the juncture where semisphere meets biosphere and illuminates the role that narrative plays in our construction of the world we occupy. The plays of Shakespeare, as works that have had unparalleled cultural diffusion, are uniquely situated to speak to the ways in which ideas and the texts they use as vehicles are always material, always environmental, and always alive. The book discusses Shakespeare’s works as vital nodes in our cultural, historical, moral and philosophical networks, but also as environmental actors in and of themselves. Plays are presented alternately as digitally encoded bits of culture awaiting their connection to an analog world, or as bacteria interacting with living organisms in both productive and destructive ways, altering their structure and creating new meaning through movement that is simultaneously biological and poetic.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of ecocriticism looking to model ecocritical readings and bridge gaps between scientific, philosophical and literary thinking.

Show more
Product Details
EAN
9780367855970
ISBN
0367855976
Publisher
Dimensions
16.2 x 24 x 1.6 centimetres (0.45 kg)

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1- An Education in Naturecultures: Review of Literature on Ecocriticism, Biosemiotics, and Shakespeare

Chapter 2- With Parted Eye: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Richard Powers’ Orfeo, and Biosemiotics

Chapter 3- Consuming the Slaughter: Applause, Bullfighting, and Fascism in Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Richard Wright’s Pagan Spain

Chapter 4- Co-conspirators: invoking Macbeth in Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake

Chapter 5- Migrations: Butterflies and Shakespeare in Barabara Kingsolvers’s Flight Behavior

Chapter 6- Mutations and Interpretations: From the Tempest to La Otra Tempestad

About the Author

Timothy Ryan Day teaches Shakespeare, Ecocriticism, and Writing at Saint Louis University's Madrid campus. He was born in Oklahoma, grew up in Chicago, and lives in Spain.

Reviews

In this beautiful work of narrative scholarship, Ryan Day succeeds in probing both the intimate and planetary dimensions of green Shakespeare studies and environmental humanities theory. Shakespeare and the Evolution of the Human Umwelt is an impressively learned and engaging book, demonstrating the unexpected relevance of Shakespeare to a wide range of contemporary environmental writing and the vibrant potential of ecocriticism.—Scott Slovic, University of Idaho, author of Going Away to Think: Engagement, Retreat, and Ecocritical ResponsibilityIn rich thoughtful prose, Shakespeare and the Evolution of the Human Umwelt sets us deep with Ovid in the roots of our literary heritage, lifts us high in leafy outgrowths of Shakespeare and our shared critical consciousness, and leaves us desolate in the hard-wired wasteland of Atwood's post-apocalyptic Oryx and Crake.—Andrew J. Power, University of Sharjah, Co-Editor, Early Shakespeare, 1588-1594 and Late Shakespeare, 1608-1613 . Editor, The Birth and Death of the Author: a Multi-authored History of Authorship in Print (Routledge, 2020).This elegant and accomplished exercise in interwoven narrative history draws fascinating parallels between literature and biology—from the butterflies of Barbara Kingsolver to tumors in The Tempest—and yet it ultimately delivers, with surprising prescience, an entirely new way of thinking about the present.—Rachel Corbett, author of You Must Change your Life: the Story of Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin

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