A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through Art

Due to the environmental crisis that chokes contemporaneity, it is of paramount importance for society to rethink our physical and abstract behaviours towards nature. Ecocriticism, providing a bridge between literature and nature, allows us to reorganise proven problematic notions, such as progress...

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Main Author: Davi Silva Gonçalves
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal do Paraná 2014-04-01
Series:Desenvolvimento e Meio Ambiente
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.c3sl.ufpr.br/ojs2/index.php/made/article/view/31902/22436
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spelling doaj-05d8b79c3f7441628386fb467c38b5662021-03-02T07:16:09ZengUniversidade Federal do ParanáDesenvolvimento e Meio Ambiente1518-952X2176-91092014-04-01293957A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through ArtDavi Silva Gonçalves0Doutorando do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Estudos da Tradução (UFSC)Due to the environmental crisis that chokes contemporaneity, it is of paramount importance for society to rethink our physical and abstract behaviours towards nature. Ecocriticism, providing a bridge between literature and nature, allows us to reorganise proven problematic notions, such as progress and development, which tend to gradually separate human beings from the space they occupy. Such separation results in a detachment that hinders our ability to transcend metropolitan, narrow-minded, biased judgments regarding the future of developing countries like Brazil, and perhaps artistic tools like literature are the only ones capable of broadening our reflections for inviting us to go beyond preconditioned perspectives. This article aims at showing how Milton Hatoum’s novel The Brothers (2000) implies that we must look for distinct possibilities of developing our spaces, more specifically the Amazon, and, through the analysis of the book as well as the impact of development on the region, the dialogue between literature and nature is proposed. First the theoretical approach on both nature and literature is delineated, followed by a discussion on how important it is to (re)connect subjects and environment, and then by analysing the novel’s characters which evince the side effects of “progress” and “growth” in the Amazonian region. The result is a problematisation of normative dichotomies such as savage/civilised, past/future, subject/space, underdeveloped/developed, and the conclusion that, for development to stop being detrimental to nature, we shall avoid believing in a “faceless environment” (Campbell, 18), that is, one needs to start observing the impact of such development on the lives of those inevitably and automatically marginalised by it.http://ojs.c3sl.ufpr.br/ojs2/index.php/made/article/view/31902/22436literaturedevelopmentenvironment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Davi Silva Gonçalves
spellingShingle Davi Silva Gonçalves
A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through Art
Desenvolvimento e Meio Ambiente
literature
development
environment
author_facet Davi Silva Gonçalves
author_sort Davi Silva Gonçalves
title A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through Art
title_short A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through Art
title_full A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through Art
title_fullStr A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through Art
title_full_unstemmed A Literary Perspective on the Environment: Rethinking Development through Art
title_sort literary perspective on the environment: rethinking development through art
publisher Universidade Federal do Paraná
series Desenvolvimento e Meio Ambiente
issn 1518-952X
2176-9109
publishDate 2014-04-01
description Due to the environmental crisis that chokes contemporaneity, it is of paramount importance for society to rethink our physical and abstract behaviours towards nature. Ecocriticism, providing a bridge between literature and nature, allows us to reorganise proven problematic notions, such as progress and development, which tend to gradually separate human beings from the space they occupy. Such separation results in a detachment that hinders our ability to transcend metropolitan, narrow-minded, biased judgments regarding the future of developing countries like Brazil, and perhaps artistic tools like literature are the only ones capable of broadening our reflections for inviting us to go beyond preconditioned perspectives. This article aims at showing how Milton Hatoum’s novel The Brothers (2000) implies that we must look for distinct possibilities of developing our spaces, more specifically the Amazon, and, through the analysis of the book as well as the impact of development on the region, the dialogue between literature and nature is proposed. First the theoretical approach on both nature and literature is delineated, followed by a discussion on how important it is to (re)connect subjects and environment, and then by analysing the novel’s characters which evince the side effects of “progress” and “growth” in the Amazonian region. The result is a problematisation of normative dichotomies such as savage/civilised, past/future, subject/space, underdeveloped/developed, and the conclusion that, for development to stop being detrimental to nature, we shall avoid believing in a “faceless environment” (Campbell, 18), that is, one needs to start observing the impact of such development on the lives of those inevitably and automatically marginalised by it.
topic literature
development
environment
url http://ojs.c3sl.ufpr.br/ojs2/index.php/made/article/view/31902/22436
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