Description

Book Synopsis
Marek Oziewicz is Professor of Literacy Education and Sidney and Marguerite Henry Professor of Children's and Young Adult Literature at the College of Education and Human Development, Universty of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA. He is the author of One Earth, One People (2008), which won the 2010 Mythopoeic Scholarship Award in Myth and Fantasy Studies; Justice in Young Adult Speculative Fiction (2015); and 5 co-edited collections, and over 50 articles and book chapters. Brian Attebery is Professor of English at Idaho State University, USA and Editor or the Journal of the Fantastic in Art. His publications include Stories about Stories: Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth (2019) and Ursula K. Le Guin: Always Coming Home (2019). In 2019 he was Leverhulme Visiting Professor of Fantasy at the University of Glasgow. Tereza Dedinová is Assistant Professor in the Department of Czech Literature, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic. She has pu

Trade Review
Mind opening. * Language and Ecology *
The book’s profusion of subjects and clarity of language will make this book compelling reading for scholars of narrative genre while remaining accessible to undergraduate readers. * Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment *
The urgings in Fantasy and Myth should be heeded. They may go far to help persuade people that we do not have to live in a dystopian world; that we cannot focus solely on end-of-the-world stories but on “how can we work together to change the world” stories * The Living Church *
Generally speaking, so-called fantasy and mythic literature tend to be regarded as enjoyable and yet too unrealistic to enable us to grasp the causes of the real dangers threatening our complex civilized world. This assumption is misleading if not discouraging, for as the numerous essays by notable scholars and artists in Fantasy and Myth in the Anthropocene demonstrate, fantasy and myth play an important role in helping us deal with the doom and gloom of climate change. Moreover, they provide extraordinary counter narratives that can help us reshape the world. This collection of essays is a wonderful breath of fresh optimistic air and reveals how the anticipatory imagination in contemporary myths and fantasy can help us resist the current ecological dilemma in which we find ourselves. * Jack Zipes, Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota, USA *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations Acknowledgements List of Academic Contributors List of Artists Introduction: The choice we have in the stories we tell Marek Oziewicz, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, USA Part I. Trouble in the Air Anthropos and the Air Brian Attebery, Idaho State University, USA From the Third Age to the Fifth Season: confronting the Anthropocene through fantasy Brian Attebery Who knows where the time goes? Nisi Shawl, author, editor and journalist Playing with the trouble: children and the Anthropocene in Nnedi Okorafor’s Akata Witch series Lindsay Burton,University of Cambridge, UK Rewrite Katherine Applegate, author Staying with the singularity: nonhuman narrators and more-than-human mythologies Alexander Popov, Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski", Bulgaria The eye of the story Joseph Bruchac / Nokidahozid, author Fantasy for the Anthropocene: on the ecocidal unconscious, planetarianism, and imagination of biocentric futures Marek Oziewicz AstroNuts, the origin story Jon Scieszka, author Part II. Dreaming the Earth Anthropos and the Earth Brian Attebery Embodying the permaculture story: Terry Pratchett’s Tiffany Aching series Tereza Dedinová, Masaryk University, Czechia Where is the place for seagrass and weevils in children’s literature? Eliot Schrefer, Fairleigh Dickinson University, USA Arboreal magic and kinship in the Chthulucene: Margaret Mahy’s trees Melanie Duckworth Just imagine Barbara Henderson, author From portable landscapes to themed thrill rides: Rowling’s heterotopic hopescapes Stephanie Weaver, Savannah College of Art and Design, USA Does fantasy literature have a place in the climate change crisis? Craig Russell, USA “The earth is my home too, can’t I help protect it?”: Planetary thinking, queer identities and environmentalism in The Legend of Korra, She-Ra and Steven Universe Aneesh Barai, University of Sheffield, UK Celebrations of resilience Elin Kelsey, author and scholar Part III: Visions in the Water Anthropos and the Ocean Brian Attebery Kim Stanley Robinson’s case for hope in New York 2140 John Rieder, University of Hawai‘i at Manoa, USA Myth makes us see Adam Gidwitz, author Sleeping with the fishmen: reimagining the Anthropocene through oceanic-chthonic kinships Prema Arasu, University of Western Australia, Australia and Drew Thornton, Curtin University, USA Fish Girl’s dilemma Donna Jo Napoli, author From culture hero to emissions zero: critiquing Maui’s extractivist mindset in Disney’s Moana Christopher D. Foley, University of Southern Mississippi, USA Finding balance and hope in the Indigenous past David Bowles, author Reimagining youth relations with Moananuiakea (The large, expansive ocean): contemporary Niuhi Mo‘olelo (man-eating shark stories) and environmental activism Caryn Kunz Lesuma, Brigham Young University, USA The future that has yet to be imagined Shaun Tan, artist writer and film maker Part IV: Playing with Fire Anthropos and the Fire Brian Attebery Convert or kill: disanthropocentric systems and religious myth in Jemisin’s Broken Earth Derek J. Thiess, University of North Georgia, USA Reimaging the upright ape Jane Yolen, author Myths of (un)creation: narrative strategies for confronting the Anthropocene Jacob Burg, Boston University, USA The stepping stone, the Boulder, and the Star: a fable for the Anthropocene Grace L. Dillon, Portland State University, USA On monsters and other matters of housekeeping:reading Jeff VanderMeer with Donna Haraway and Ursula K. Le Guin Kim Hendrickx, University of Leuven, Belgium The seriousness of writing funny Molly B. Burnham, author Literalizing hyperobjects: on (mis)representing global warming in A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones Markus Laukkanen, Tampere University, Finland Index

Fantasy and Myth in the Anthropocene

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    A Hardback by Professor Brian Attebery, Dr Tereza Dedinová

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      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
      Publication Date: 10/01/2022
      ISBN13: 9781350203341, 978-1350203341
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Marek Oziewicz is Professor of Literacy Education and Sidney and Marguerite Henry Professor of Children's and Young Adult Literature at the College of Education and Human Development, Universty of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA. He is the author of One Earth, One People (2008), which won the 2010 Mythopoeic Scholarship Award in Myth and Fantasy Studies; Justice in Young Adult Speculative Fiction (2015); and 5 co-edited collections, and over 50 articles and book chapters. Brian Attebery is Professor of English at Idaho State University, USA and Editor or the Journal of the Fantastic in Art. His publications include Stories about Stories: Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth (2019) and Ursula K. Le Guin: Always Coming Home (2019). In 2019 he was Leverhulme Visiting Professor of Fantasy at the University of Glasgow. Tereza Dedinová is Assistant Professor in the Department of Czech Literature, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic. She has pu

      Trade Review
      Mind opening. * Language and Ecology *
      The book’s profusion of subjects and clarity of language will make this book compelling reading for scholars of narrative genre while remaining accessible to undergraduate readers. * Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment *
      The urgings in Fantasy and Myth should be heeded. They may go far to help persuade people that we do not have to live in a dystopian world; that we cannot focus solely on end-of-the-world stories but on “how can we work together to change the world” stories * The Living Church *
      Generally speaking, so-called fantasy and mythic literature tend to be regarded as enjoyable and yet too unrealistic to enable us to grasp the causes of the real dangers threatening our complex civilized world. This assumption is misleading if not discouraging, for as the numerous essays by notable scholars and artists in Fantasy and Myth in the Anthropocene demonstrate, fantasy and myth play an important role in helping us deal with the doom and gloom of climate change. Moreover, they provide extraordinary counter narratives that can help us reshape the world. This collection of essays is a wonderful breath of fresh optimistic air and reveals how the anticipatory imagination in contemporary myths and fantasy can help us resist the current ecological dilemma in which we find ourselves. * Jack Zipes, Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota, USA *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations Acknowledgements List of Academic Contributors List of Artists Introduction: The choice we have in the stories we tell Marek Oziewicz, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, USA Part I. Trouble in the Air Anthropos and the Air Brian Attebery, Idaho State University, USA From the Third Age to the Fifth Season: confronting the Anthropocene through fantasy Brian Attebery Who knows where the time goes? Nisi Shawl, author, editor and journalist Playing with the trouble: children and the Anthropocene in Nnedi Okorafor’s Akata Witch series Lindsay Burton,University of Cambridge, UK Rewrite Katherine Applegate, author Staying with the singularity: nonhuman narrators and more-than-human mythologies Alexander Popov, Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski", Bulgaria The eye of the story Joseph Bruchac / Nokidahozid, author Fantasy for the Anthropocene: on the ecocidal unconscious, planetarianism, and imagination of biocentric futures Marek Oziewicz AstroNuts, the origin story Jon Scieszka, author Part II. Dreaming the Earth Anthropos and the Earth Brian Attebery Embodying the permaculture story: Terry Pratchett’s Tiffany Aching series Tereza Dedinová, Masaryk University, Czechia Where is the place for seagrass and weevils in children’s literature? Eliot Schrefer, Fairleigh Dickinson University, USA Arboreal magic and kinship in the Chthulucene: Margaret Mahy’s trees Melanie Duckworth Just imagine Barbara Henderson, author From portable landscapes to themed thrill rides: Rowling’s heterotopic hopescapes Stephanie Weaver, Savannah College of Art and Design, USA Does fantasy literature have a place in the climate change crisis? Craig Russell, USA “The earth is my home too, can’t I help protect it?”: Planetary thinking, queer identities and environmentalism in The Legend of Korra, She-Ra and Steven Universe Aneesh Barai, University of Sheffield, UK Celebrations of resilience Elin Kelsey, author and scholar Part III: Visions in the Water Anthropos and the Ocean Brian Attebery Kim Stanley Robinson’s case for hope in New York 2140 John Rieder, University of Hawai‘i at Manoa, USA Myth makes us see Adam Gidwitz, author Sleeping with the fishmen: reimagining the Anthropocene through oceanic-chthonic kinships Prema Arasu, University of Western Australia, Australia and Drew Thornton, Curtin University, USA Fish Girl’s dilemma Donna Jo Napoli, author From culture hero to emissions zero: critiquing Maui’s extractivist mindset in Disney’s Moana Christopher D. Foley, University of Southern Mississippi, USA Finding balance and hope in the Indigenous past David Bowles, author Reimagining youth relations with Moananuiakea (The large, expansive ocean): contemporary Niuhi Mo‘olelo (man-eating shark stories) and environmental activism Caryn Kunz Lesuma, Brigham Young University, USA The future that has yet to be imagined Shaun Tan, artist writer and film maker Part IV: Playing with Fire Anthropos and the Fire Brian Attebery Convert or kill: disanthropocentric systems and religious myth in Jemisin’s Broken Earth Derek J. Thiess, University of North Georgia, USA Reimaging the upright ape Jane Yolen, author Myths of (un)creation: narrative strategies for confronting the Anthropocene Jacob Burg, Boston University, USA The stepping stone, the Boulder, and the Star: a fable for the Anthropocene Grace L. Dillon, Portland State University, USA On monsters and other matters of housekeeping:reading Jeff VanderMeer with Donna Haraway and Ursula K. Le Guin Kim Hendrickx, University of Leuven, Belgium The seriousness of writing funny Molly B. Burnham, author Literalizing hyperobjects: on (mis)representing global warming in A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones Markus Laukkanen, Tampere University, Finland Index

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