Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and Literature

This conversation brought together Berit Ellingsen, the acclaimed writer of novels, short stories, non-fiction pieces, and video game criticism and fiction, with Andrew Hageman, a scholar who researches and teaches intersections of techno-culture and ecology. Ellingsen’s recent novel, Not Dark Yet (...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrew Hageman, Berit Ellingsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2018-02-01
Series:C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://c21.openlibhums.org/articles/28
id doaj-c9a201a280104cfeb760e0a71b7b36d5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c9a201a280104cfeb760e0a71b7b36d52021-06-02T01:41:18ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesC21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings2045-52162045-52242018-02-016110.16995/c21.2834Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and LiteratureAndrew Hageman0Berit Ellingsen1Luther CollegeIndependent WriterThis conversation brought together Berit Ellingsen, the acclaimed writer of novels, short stories, non-fiction pieces, and video game criticism and fiction, with Andrew Hageman, a scholar who researches and teaches intersections of techno-culture and ecology. Ellingsen’s recent novel, Not Dark Yet (2015), has established her as an ascendant figure in the world of speculative, perhaps “weird,” fiction, and Jeff VanderMeer has praised it in his list of favorite book reads of 2015 as a significant contribution to fiction that engages the strangeness of coming to consciousness of climate change, referring to the novel as, “An ambiguous and luminous and mysterious text that changes shape and meaning on rereading, as with all the best fiction.” What follows is a conversation that unfolded over several conversational sessions spanning the Northern hemispheric late summer and autumn of 2016, as Andrew experienced the prolonged flooding of his basement in Northeast Iowa due to unusually high rainfalls, as well as the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States. Their conversation reflects on and engages with this emerging world of strange weather and strange days to articulate the roles of literature and the arts in the Anthropocene.https://c21.openlibhums.org/articles/28Anthropoceneweird fictionecologyecocriticismScandinavian fiction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Hageman
Berit Ellingsen
spellingShingle Andrew Hageman
Berit Ellingsen
Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and Literature
C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings
Anthropocene
weird fiction
ecology
ecocriticism
Scandinavian fiction
author_facet Andrew Hageman
Berit Ellingsen
author_sort Andrew Hageman
title Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and Literature
title_short Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and Literature
title_full Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and Literature
title_fullStr Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and Literature
title_full_unstemmed Tricking the Troll: A Conversation with Berit Ellingsen on the Anthropocene and Literature
title_sort tricking the troll: a conversation with berit ellingsen on the anthropocene and literature
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings
issn 2045-5216
2045-5224
publishDate 2018-02-01
description This conversation brought together Berit Ellingsen, the acclaimed writer of novels, short stories, non-fiction pieces, and video game criticism and fiction, with Andrew Hageman, a scholar who researches and teaches intersections of techno-culture and ecology. Ellingsen’s recent novel, Not Dark Yet (2015), has established her as an ascendant figure in the world of speculative, perhaps “weird,” fiction, and Jeff VanderMeer has praised it in his list of favorite book reads of 2015 as a significant contribution to fiction that engages the strangeness of coming to consciousness of climate change, referring to the novel as, “An ambiguous and luminous and mysterious text that changes shape and meaning on rereading, as with all the best fiction.” What follows is a conversation that unfolded over several conversational sessions spanning the Northern hemispheric late summer and autumn of 2016, as Andrew experienced the prolonged flooding of his basement in Northeast Iowa due to unusually high rainfalls, as well as the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States. Their conversation reflects on and engages with this emerging world of strange weather and strange days to articulate the roles of literature and the arts in the Anthropocene.
topic Anthropocene
weird fiction
ecology
ecocriticism
Scandinavian fiction
url https://c21.openlibhums.org/articles/28
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewhageman trickingthetrollaconversationwithberitellingsenontheanthropoceneandliterature
AT beritellingsen trickingthetrollaconversationwithberitellingsenontheanthropoceneandliterature
_version_ 1721409558475177984