This conversation among the editors of ARIEL and Timothy Clark addresses his 2012 essay, “Derangements of Scale,” published in Telemorphosis: Theory in the Era of Climate Change. In his essay, Clark suggests that scale effects play an important role in contemporary global politics and climate change, and he proposes a new, larger scale of literary study commensurate with an awareness of these issues. The editors discuss the implications of Clark’s essay for postcolonial studies, the merits of his proposed method of literary interpretation, and the ramifications of his discussion of human agency. Clark takes up all these issues in his response to the editors’ conversation
The writers in the volume ask, implicitly, how the 21st century horizons that exceed any political, ...
By conducting a qualitative content analysis of 72 poems written about climate change by poets from ...
This article reads three American works of climate change life writing in order to examine how print...
This article discusses recent work in the environmental humanities on the role of scale and what Tim...
This article provides an overview of climate change in literature, focusing on the representation of...
This article makes the case for more climate change, where climate change refers to the prevailing i...
“Transscalar Critique” proposes a new model of literary criticism for reading in the Anthropocene. ...
In the last five years, climate change has emerged as a dominant theme in literature and, correspond...
In literary criticism, the term ‘ecocriticism’ is employed to capture the various aspects of the rel...
Many theorists have lamented the lack of serious literary fiction addressing the shifting realities ...
Are “Culture Studies” doomed by the coming ecocide? Or have they already become or made themselves z...
This article makes the case for more climate change, where climate change refers to the prevailing i...
This paper considers the deconstructive force of climate change in intellectual and political and in...
The Romantic movement in British literature coincided with new breakthroughs in meteorology and clim...
Although the Anthropocene and climate change are widely known as scientific issues, they are also si...
The writers in the volume ask, implicitly, how the 21st century horizons that exceed any political, ...
By conducting a qualitative content analysis of 72 poems written about climate change by poets from ...
This article reads three American works of climate change life writing in order to examine how print...
This article discusses recent work in the environmental humanities on the role of scale and what Tim...
This article provides an overview of climate change in literature, focusing on the representation of...
This article makes the case for more climate change, where climate change refers to the prevailing i...
“Transscalar Critique” proposes a new model of literary criticism for reading in the Anthropocene. ...
In the last five years, climate change has emerged as a dominant theme in literature and, correspond...
In literary criticism, the term ‘ecocriticism’ is employed to capture the various aspects of the rel...
Many theorists have lamented the lack of serious literary fiction addressing the shifting realities ...
Are “Culture Studies” doomed by the coming ecocide? Or have they already become or made themselves z...
This article makes the case for more climate change, where climate change refers to the prevailing i...
This paper considers the deconstructive force of climate change in intellectual and political and in...
The Romantic movement in British literature coincided with new breakthroughs in meteorology and clim...
Although the Anthropocene and climate change are widely known as scientific issues, they are also si...
The writers in the volume ask, implicitly, how the 21st century horizons that exceed any political, ...
By conducting a qualitative content analysis of 72 poems written about climate change by poets from ...
This article reads three American works of climate change life writing in order to examine how print...