The continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other stories

This thesis comprises a critical component, The Continuous Flight From Wonder: An Ecocritical Analysis of Tensions Between Natural History and Modern Science in Andrea Barrett's Fiction, and a creative component, How Muskrat Made the World and Other Stories. These two pieces are connected by th...

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Main Author: McGuigan, Keri
Other Authors: Burnside, John
Published: University of St Andrews 2015
Subjects:
813
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.720283
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7202832018-11-27T03:20:36ZThe continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other storiesMcGuigan, KeriBurnside, John2015This thesis comprises a critical component, The Continuous Flight From Wonder: An Ecocritical Analysis of Tensions Between Natural History and Modern Science in Andrea Barrett's Fiction, and a creative component, How Muskrat Made the World and Other Stories. These two pieces are connected by their common theme of characters defining their place in the world through their relationship with nature. More specifically, both seek to explore how knowledge of and interactions with the nonhuman natural world play a role in the characters' view of self. The critical component looks at the way in which the tension between natural history and modern science in Barrett's work affects the characters' troubled relationship with nature as they conceive it. The body of this piece is divided into four chapters, each corresponding to a recurring character archetype: The Naturalist, The Explorer, The Immigrant, and The Female Scientist. By analyzing the ways in which the restriction of these archetypes affect the characters' relationship with the natural world, I will show that Barrett's work provides a wealth of material for ecocritical analysis and should be considered alongside other works of ecocritical fiction. The creative component consists of seven short stories linked by the presence of human/animal interactions in each one and loosely by place. The characters in these eight stories try to make sense of the world through their relationship with animals. Sometimes this knowledge of animals comes through myth, science, and, most frequently, through domestic familiarity. The mirror that animal interactions holds up to the human characters often illuminates flaws and strengths, but inevitably defines what it is that makes them human by highlighting their affinity or aversion to the nonhuman natural world.813University of St Andrewshttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.720283http://hdl.handle.net/10023/11388Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 813
spellingShingle 813
McGuigan, Keri
The continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other stories
description This thesis comprises a critical component, The Continuous Flight From Wonder: An Ecocritical Analysis of Tensions Between Natural History and Modern Science in Andrea Barrett's Fiction, and a creative component, How Muskrat Made the World and Other Stories. These two pieces are connected by their common theme of characters defining their place in the world through their relationship with nature. More specifically, both seek to explore how knowledge of and interactions with the nonhuman natural world play a role in the characters' view of self. The critical component looks at the way in which the tension between natural history and modern science in Barrett's work affects the characters' troubled relationship with nature as they conceive it. The body of this piece is divided into four chapters, each corresponding to a recurring character archetype: The Naturalist, The Explorer, The Immigrant, and The Female Scientist. By analyzing the ways in which the restriction of these archetypes affect the characters' relationship with the natural world, I will show that Barrett's work provides a wealth of material for ecocritical analysis and should be considered alongside other works of ecocritical fiction. The creative component consists of seven short stories linked by the presence of human/animal interactions in each one and loosely by place. The characters in these eight stories try to make sense of the world through their relationship with animals. Sometimes this knowledge of animals comes through myth, science, and, most frequently, through domestic familiarity. The mirror that animal interactions holds up to the human characters often illuminates flaws and strengths, but inevitably defines what it is that makes them human by highlighting their affinity or aversion to the nonhuman natural world.
author2 Burnside, John
author_facet Burnside, John
McGuigan, Keri
author McGuigan, Keri
author_sort McGuigan, Keri
title The continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other stories
title_short The continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other stories
title_full The continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other stories
title_fullStr The continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other stories
title_full_unstemmed The continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in Andrea Barrett's fiction ; How muskrat made the world and other stories
title_sort continuous flight from wonder : an ecocritical analysis of the tensions between natural history and modern science in andrea barrett's fiction ; how muskrat made the world and other stories
publisher University of St Andrews
publishDate 2015
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.720283
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