Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments

Allison K. Athens"Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments" This dissertation examines the lives of humans and animals in the North American Arctic and the types of narrative modes used to describe them. My project seeks to elucidate the poetics of place...

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Main Author: Athens, Allison Katherine
Other Authors: Freccero, Carla
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5jf3d1kx
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt5jf3d1kx 2023-05-15T14:51:17+02:00 Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments Athens, Allison Katherine Freccero, Carla 2013-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5jf3d1kx en eng eScholarship, University of California qt5jf3d1kx https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5jf3d1kx public Literature Ethnic studies Women's studies Animal Studies Arctic Climate Change Environment Environmental Justice Indigenous Studies etd 2013 ftcdlib 2020-06-06T07:56:17Z Allison K. Athens"Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments" This dissertation examines the lives of humans and animals in the North American Arctic and the types of narrative modes used to describe them. My project seeks to elucidate the poetics of place, or how language creates and shapes the specificity of social and ecological environments in the north. This poetics is not neutral, however, as language, chiefly the language of writing but also that of film, is political in its enactments of or prohibitions on ways of engaging with the world. Thus, my project begins with administrative discourses such as legal statutes that govern hunting, fishing and subsistence activities; congressional documents such as the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act; and state and federal mandates that create (and sometimes destroy) wilderness parks and recreation areas in Alaska. Furthermore, given that these governing directives often obscure the prolific contemporary written and visual art of Alaska's native peoples that represent a very different view of place, inhabitation, and northern identity, my project engages the concurrent critical and creative work of northern indigenous peoples. I divide my dissertation into four chapters, each featuring an iconic creature of the north: polar bear, seal, caribou, and salmon. I choose these animals for their prominence in stories about the environment, economy, and culture in the Arctic. They are also important for being at the center of disputes involving laws enacted either to protect them from human exploitation or to aid in their harvesting for personal or profit-motivated use. Finally, I explore the stakes of undoing and redoing these contested spaces and discourses and ask how they might coexist, if one idiom (the language of linear economic development) were not to colonize another (the language of a multidimensional ecology). Reading an alternative epistemology through the lenses of ecocriticism, feminism, and postcolonial theory allows me to confront an archive that first figures, then legalizes, wilderness as empty, species as vanishing, and history as linear and progressive. Other/Unknown Material Arctic caribou Climate change polar bear Alaska University of California: eScholarship Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Literature
Ethnic studies
Women's studies
Animal Studies
Arctic
Climate Change
Environment
Environmental Justice
Indigenous Studies
spellingShingle Literature
Ethnic studies
Women's studies
Animal Studies
Arctic
Climate Change
Environment
Environmental Justice
Indigenous Studies
Athens, Allison Katherine
Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments
topic_facet Literature
Ethnic studies
Women's studies
Animal Studies
Arctic
Climate Change
Environment
Environmental Justice
Indigenous Studies
description Allison K. Athens"Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments" This dissertation examines the lives of humans and animals in the North American Arctic and the types of narrative modes used to describe them. My project seeks to elucidate the poetics of place, or how language creates and shapes the specificity of social and ecological environments in the north. This poetics is not neutral, however, as language, chiefly the language of writing but also that of film, is political in its enactments of or prohibitions on ways of engaging with the world. Thus, my project begins with administrative discourses such as legal statutes that govern hunting, fishing and subsistence activities; congressional documents such as the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act; and state and federal mandates that create (and sometimes destroy) wilderness parks and recreation areas in Alaska. Furthermore, given that these governing directives often obscure the prolific contemporary written and visual art of Alaska's native peoples that represent a very different view of place, inhabitation, and northern identity, my project engages the concurrent critical and creative work of northern indigenous peoples. I divide my dissertation into four chapters, each featuring an iconic creature of the north: polar bear, seal, caribou, and salmon. I choose these animals for their prominence in stories about the environment, economy, and culture in the Arctic. They are also important for being at the center of disputes involving laws enacted either to protect them from human exploitation or to aid in their harvesting for personal or profit-motivated use. Finally, I explore the stakes of undoing and redoing these contested spaces and discourses and ask how they might coexist, if one idiom (the language of linear economic development) were not to colonize another (the language of a multidimensional ecology). Reading an alternative epistemology through the lenses of ecocriticism, feminism, and postcolonial theory allows me to confront an archive that first figures, then legalizes, wilderness as empty, species as vanishing, and history as linear and progressive.
author2 Freccero, Carla
format Other/Unknown Material
author Athens, Allison Katherine
author_facet Athens, Allison Katherine
author_sort Athens, Allison Katherine
title Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments
title_short Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments
title_full Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments
title_fullStr Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments
title_full_unstemmed Arctic Ecologies: The Politics and Poetics of Northern Literary Environments
title_sort arctic ecologies: the politics and poetics of northern literary environments
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2013
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5jf3d1kx
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
caribou
Climate change
polar bear
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
caribou
Climate change
polar bear
Alaska
op_relation qt5jf3d1kx
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5jf3d1kx
op_rights public
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