'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor

This thesis examines the predominant strategies that are currently used to teach nature writing in Higher Education in the UK and US based on a series of interviews with educators. Investigating and drawing on recent developments in ecocriticism, it assesses the limitations of pedagogical instructio...

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Main Author: Galleymore, Isabel Rose Loveday
Other Authors: Brown, Andy
Published: University of Exeter 2015
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.684098
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6840982017-08-30T03:24:33Z'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphorGalleymore, Isabel Rose LovedayBrown, Andy2015This thesis examines the predominant strategies that are currently used to teach nature writing in Higher Education in the UK and US based on a series of interviews with educators. Investigating and drawing on recent developments in ecocriticism, it assesses the limitations of pedagogical instruction, highlights the challenges faced in representing the environment, and establishes the need for alternative strategies. This research concentrates upon the ways in which current nature writing pedagogy emphasises ‘direct perception’ that distinguishes between a literal, scientific writing on the one hand and a figurative, imaginative writing on the other, and values the former above the latter. It also reveals the disparity between pedagogical intentions to foster responsibility for the environment in their students, and the shortage of exercises that engage with the threats currently posed to environments. Challenging these practices, this thesis argues that metaphor – an inclusive term for a range of figurative devices such as apostrophe and anthropomorphism – can guide important engagements that lead to new understandings of the environment. Close readings of poetry by a number of contemporary poets from the UK and US lead this argument. These establish how each poet’s application of metaphor serves to draw attention towards particular qualities in materiality, different temporalities and places, nonhuman lives, and the issues affecting environments. Developing certain readings with twentieth-century metaphor theory further attests to the capacities of metaphor to guide new thinking. As nature writing courses and classes continue to be offered, this research proposes an alternative set of engagements that aim to enrich the relationship between the writer and the environment. A short collection of my poems, collected as an appendix, acts as further methodological investigation of metaphor in environmental representation. A second appendix demonstrates my interview methodology.378.1University of Exeterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.684098http://hdl.handle.net/10871/21139Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 378.1
spellingShingle 378.1
Galleymore, Isabel Rose Loveday
'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor
description This thesis examines the predominant strategies that are currently used to teach nature writing in Higher Education in the UK and US based on a series of interviews with educators. Investigating and drawing on recent developments in ecocriticism, it assesses the limitations of pedagogical instruction, highlights the challenges faced in representing the environment, and establishes the need for alternative strategies. This research concentrates upon the ways in which current nature writing pedagogy emphasises ‘direct perception’ that distinguishes between a literal, scientific writing on the one hand and a figurative, imaginative writing on the other, and values the former above the latter. It also reveals the disparity between pedagogical intentions to foster responsibility for the environment in their students, and the shortage of exercises that engage with the threats currently posed to environments. Challenging these practices, this thesis argues that metaphor – an inclusive term for a range of figurative devices such as apostrophe and anthropomorphism – can guide important engagements that lead to new understandings of the environment. Close readings of poetry by a number of contemporary poets from the UK and US lead this argument. These establish how each poet’s application of metaphor serves to draw attention towards particular qualities in materiality, different temporalities and places, nonhuman lives, and the issues affecting environments. Developing certain readings with twentieth-century metaphor theory further attests to the capacities of metaphor to guide new thinking. As nature writing courses and classes continue to be offered, this research proposes an alternative set of engagements that aim to enrich the relationship between the writer and the environment. A short collection of my poems, collected as an appendix, acts as further methodological investigation of metaphor in environmental representation. A second appendix demonstrates my interview methodology.
author2 Brown, Andy
author_facet Brown, Andy
Galleymore, Isabel Rose Loveday
author Galleymore, Isabel Rose Loveday
author_sort Galleymore, Isabel Rose Loveday
title 'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor
title_short 'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor
title_full 'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor
title_fullStr 'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor
title_full_unstemmed 'Trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor
title_sort 'trope on trope' : rethinking nature writing pedagogy through metaphor
publisher University of Exeter
publishDate 2015
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.684098
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