posted on 2024-07-23, 03:15authored bySuvi Derkenne
<p>This thesis investigates the necropastoral, the re-imagining and retelling of ecological death and dying, in a selection of poetry from Mary Oliver, Alice Oswald, and Fiona Wright. To date, there has been little research explaining how necrology is positioned and presented in ecocriticism, despite necrotized environments being a prominent feature of literature concerning climate trauma and collapse. Oliver, Oswald, and Wright are read for their opening of ecophilosophical responses to ecological death and dying through ecofeminist, queer, and postcolonial perspectives. Highlighting non-human animal and ecological experiences of violence and mourning, Oliver and Oswald create a unique mythology of place accounting for the frightening phenomenology of environmental threat. Wright creates a bioregional immediacy and intimacy, conceptualising a probiotic bond between poet-speaker and environment. The dead, in the poetry of Oliver, Oswald and Wright, are physical realities and metaphors, illustrating a transcorporeal and fluid relationship between human/more-than-human bonds and the perpetuation of ecological eschatology. However, each poet also illustrates an Anglophone necropolitics that reflects the inability of environmental criticism to affirm death and dying as part of ecological life. The complexity and nuance of more-than human bonds are not radically reimagined in the poetry of Oliver, Oswald, and Wright. By sexualising and engendering necrotised environments, Oliver and Oswald emphasise a thantaophilic reading of environment which revisits rather than critiques ideological and dualist positioning of ecological bodies. Nature is illustrated as inanimate rather than radically animate. A necropolitical re-reading of Wright’s work raises questions concerning neo-postcolonialism and the sanitising of the Australian landscape from Indigenous histories of violence and mento mori, highlighting the need to decolonize mourning. Through the lens of the necropolitical, the poetry of Oliver, Oswald, and Wright, reveals a problematic fallacy within the theoretical fields of ecocriticism: how can it be that ecological agency is expressed in ecopoetics if nonhuman agency is voiced through the dead? This is not a rhetorical question, for the answer is evident; the silencing of death allows for ecological agencies to not only be easily assimilated into the anthropocentric, but to also ensure there is no possibility of voiced contention. The necropolitical highlights how if environmental reconciliation is levied at the human cost of ecological extinction, it is not ecological trauma that is being voiced, but anthropocentric lament. The scale of the current climate crisis urgently calls for both a critical and creative reimagining of restrictive and damaging ideas of ecological death, dying and mourning. The emerging and transdisciplinary field of ecological necropolitics navigates the realities of ecological death, dying, and the brutality of grief that is otherwise sanitised from Western anthropocentric discourse. This thesis encapsulates the critical and neglected significance of ecological necropolitics, challenging normative assumptions and reductive expectations associated with mass ecological extinction, instead bringing necropastoral ontologies into both contemplation and conversation.</p>
Funding
Australian Government’s 'Research Training Program' scholarship
History
Table of Contents
Introduction. Death and the anthropocene: reading ecological necropolitics -- Chapter one. ‘And the dead tree gives no shelter’: bioregions of apocalypse within the poetry of Mary Oliver and Alice Oswald -- Chapter two. Haunted landscapes and the heritagisation of death in Australia. A reading of Fiona Wright’s Knuckled and Domestic Interior -- Chapter Three. Embodiment and ecological mesh within the necrobiome. A reading of selected works from Mary Oliver and Alice Oswald -- Chapter four. Queering ecology, queering death? Reading queer ecologies in Fiona Wright’s Domestic Interior and the poetry of Mary Oliver. -- Chapter five. The abject dead. A reading of Alice Oswald’s Falling Awake and the poetry of Mary Oliver -- Conclusion. Beyond anthropocentric dead-ends: acts of necropolitical becoming -- References
Awarding Institution
Macquarie University
Degree Type
Thesis PhD
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Department, Centre or School
Department of Media, Communications, Creative Arts, Language, and Literature
Year of Award
2023
Principal Supervisor
Marcelle Freiman
Rights
Copyright: The Author
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