Thursday 28 March 2024

Literary Studies in an age of environmental crisis – Cheryll Glotfelty

 

https://youtu.be/DV4RYlI6sTg

Cherryl Glotfelty (born in 1958) is the professor of Of literature and the environment at the University of Nevada Reno. She is the co editor of ‘The Bioregional Imagination: Literature, Ecology, and Place’. It was William Rueckert who used the term Eco-centrism in 1978 as a movement owes much to Rachel's silent spring. It was Cheryl Glotfelty who came out with Eco criticism Reader along with its three phases. She also defined eco criticism as the study of the relationship between literature and the physical environment. In her Eco criticism reader, she talks about ‘literary studies in an age of environment crisis’.

Though race, class and gender were the inevitable topics of the 20th century literature, there where newspaper reports about oil spills, lead and asbestos poisoning, toxic waste contamination, extinction of species, growing hole in the ozone layer, predictions of global warming, acid rain nuclear reactor disaster in Chernobyl, droughts, floods and hurricanes. But, the other disciplines like history, sociology, philosophy, law and religion talk about the environment since 1970. Unfortunately, literary studies and literary criticism were not aware of the environmental crisis or they have remained indifferent to the environmental concerns. However, there were individual and cultural scholars and they had shared their ecological theories and criticism isolated since the seventies.  As they didn't organize into a group, eco criticism didn't have its presence in the modern language association (MLA).

In 1985 teaching environmental literature Materials Methods, Resources that included the outputs of 19 different scholars made the American universities include literature courses in their environment studies curricula and some of the English departments begin to offer minor courses in environmental literature. In 1992 a new association for the study of Literature and Environmental (ASLE) was formed with the intention of promoting the ideas and information to strengthen the relationship between human beings and the natural world. Glotfelty is also of the opinion that Elaine Showalter's model of the three development stages of feminist criticism provides a useful scheme for describing three analogous phases in eco-criticism. In the first stage how nature is represented in literature is discussed. In the second stage the neglected genre of nature writing is discussed and in the third stage the dualism that prevalent in western thought and its diving humanity from nature is discussed. Thus, she proves the strong link between eco feminism and eco criticism.

Eco criticism has brought an eco-centered (earth-centered) approach to literary studies instead of anthropocentrism. It began to ask questions like, Are the values expressed in a work consistent with ecological wisdom? Do men write about Nature differently than women? As everything is connected to everything else in this earth, literature can't float above the material world anymore. As we have reached the age of environmental limits, as our wants and needs have out stripped the ability of the earth to provide, either we have to change our ways or we have to face the global catastrophe.

According to Glotfelty, an ecologically focused criticism will help us to solve the environmental problems.  It will redraw the boundaries of literary studies; bring about important changes in the curriculum and university policies.  Aldo Leopold’s ‘A Sand County Almanac’ and Edward Abbey’s ‘Desert Solitaire’ should be prescribed for students.  All students should have at least one inter-disciplinary course in environmental studies.  Then only they may feel, think and sometimes say what Loren Acton, her father, said on his viewing the earth from the space shuttle in 1985,

“……Below was a welcoming planer…….that’s where life is; that’s where all the good stuff is”.


-------Thulasidharan V

 

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