ABSTRACT

The environmental challenges facing humanity in the twenty-first century are not only acute and grave, they are also unprecedented in kind, complexity and scope. Nonetheless, or therefore, the political response to problems such as climate change, biodiversity loss and widespread pollution continues to fall short. To address these challenges it seems clear that we need new ways of thinking about the relationship between humans and nature, local and global, and past, present and future. One place to look for such new ideas is in poetry, designed to contain multiple levels of meaning at once, challenge the imagination, and evoke responses that are based on something more than scientific consensus and rationale.

This ecocritical book traces the environmental sensibilities of two Anglophone poets; Nobel Prize-winner Seamus Heaney (1939-2013), and British Poet Laureate Ted Hughes (1930-1998). Drawing on recent and multifarious developments in ecocritical theory, it examines how Hughes's and Heaney's respective poetics interact with late twentieth century developments in environmental thought, focusing in particular on ideas about ecology and environment in relation to religion, time, technology, colonialism, semiotics, and globalisation.

This book is aimed at students of literature and environment, the relationship between poetry and environmental humanities, and the poetry of Ted Hughes or Seamus Heaney

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

Ecotrickster

Environment and nature religion in Crow 1

chapter 2|20 pages

Human history and environmental time

Postmodern nature in Heaney's bog poems

chapter 3|17 pages

Technology and landscape

Counter and recovery poems in Elmet

chapter 4|19 pages

Colonised nature

Heaney and postcolonial ecocriticism

chapter 5|16 pages

Ecosemiotics

Anti-anthropocentrism in Hughes's animal poems

chapter 6|22 pages

‘The place in me’

Heaney, globalisation and sense of place

chapter |17 pages

Conclusion

Hughes, Heaney and the different natures of ecopoetics