Sponsored
Italy and the Ecological Imagination - (Climate Change and Society) by Damiano Benvegnù & Matteo Gilebbi (Hardcover)
In Stock
Sponsored
About this item
Highlights
- What can Italy teach us about our relationships with the nonhuman world in the current socio-environmental crisis?
- Author(s): Damiano Benvegnù & Matteo Gilebbi
- 206 Pages
- Literary Criticism, European
- Series Name: Climate Change and Society
Description
Book Synopsis
What can Italy teach us about our relationships with the nonhuman world in the current socio-environmental crisis? 'Italy and the Ecological Imagination: Ecocritical Theories and Practices' focuses on how Italian writers, activists, visual artists, and philosophers engage with real and fictional environments and how their engagements reflect, critique, and animate the approach that Italian culture has had toward the physical environment and its ecology since late antiquity. Through a comparative and interdisciplinary approach, the essays collected in this volume explore topics including climate change, environmental justice, animal ethics, and socio-environmental degradation to provide a cogent analysis of how Italian ecological narratives fit within the current transnational debate occurring in the Environmental Humanities.
The aim of 'Italy and the Ecological Imagination' is thus to explore non-anthropocentric modes of thinking and interacting with the nonhuman world. The goal is to provide accounts of how Italian historical records have potentially shaped our environmental imagination and how contemporary Italian authors are developing approaches beyond humanism in order to raise questions about the role of humans in a possible (or potentially) post-natural world. Ultimately, the volume will offer a critical map of Italian contributions to our contemporary investigation of the relationships between human and nonhuman habitats and communities.
Review Quotes
Damiano Benvengù and Matteo Gilebbi, both leading thinkers in ecocritical Italian studies, have convened a lively and wide-ranging collection that confirms the vital relevance of the Environmental Humanities in Italy. Their introductory essay lays out in extraordinarily clear and insightful terms the current state of the evolving interdisciplinary field, both regarding theoretical trends and in light of contemporary Italian legislation. The essays that follow, in a spiraling voyage through landscapes, materials, philosophies, and artistic practices, chart a new map of the Italian peninsula: a map of environmental atrocities but also of profoundly hopeful, creative responses. From the gritty surfaces of Turinese sidewalks to the dioxin-laced lungs of women in the Land of Fires, and from the imploring gaze of a young buffalo to the embracing arm of a land artist, the subjects are compelling, quirky, and have important lessons to impart about environmental pasts and futures.
Dr. Elena Past
Professor of Italian
Classical and Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
Wayne State University
This is an eminently timely and theoretically sophisticated volume that does justice to the disciplinary and ethical complexity of the ecological impetus currently animating the Humanities. Targeting the theoretical and practical entanglements of nature and culture, the introduction sets out an engaging case for the centrality of the imagination in charting responses to our planetary crises. Nothing is taken for granted here as the editors provide lucid definitions of terms and references, from ecocriticism and the environmental humanities to the notion of Italy itself.
The bi-partite division of the volume into "theories" and "practices" is a happy one, allowing for echoes to emerge across the two sections, designed, as the editors indicate, to "converse" and "converge." The volume offers a truly impressive range as multiple forms of expression (film, literature, philosophy, sculpture, documentary) are placed in dialogue with an equally impressive range of environmental questions. In this, the volume embodies the spirit of the environmental humanities, characterized precisely by a truly transdisciplinary posture.
This text will have broad appeal, attracting a readership of not only Italianists but also scholars with interests in animal studies, posthumanism, ecofeminism, and new materialism, to name just a few fields. Though rooted within Italian studies, a field central to the environmental humanities, this volume is not at all limited by its national focus. Indeed, multiple chapters explicitly broach global questions through a local Italianist lens. From this perspective, there are some truly stand-out essays, in particular, those by Iovino, Cannamela, and Saporito. The volume's appeal also lies in its activist engagement with the Anthropocene. Rejecting a posture of despair in the face of our planetary crises, the editors point to the capacity of imaginative thinking to reveal and safeguard our more-than-human planet.
Prof. Dr. Deborah Amberson
University of Florida