Homesickness

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A01=Ryan Hediger
affect theory
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
American literature
animal studies
animal theory
Animality
Annie Proulx
Anthropocene
Author_Ryan Hediger
automatic-update
capitalism
Cary Wolfe
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DSBH5
Category=HPS
Category=QDTS
COP=United States
Cosmopolitan
cosmopolitanism
Cultural Mobility
Dark Ecology
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Displacement
Eco-cosmopolitanism
ecocriticism
Enlightenment
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=0
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ernest Hemingway
Hemingway
homesickness
Jennifer K. Ladino
Language_English
Marilynn Robinson
mortality
Nostalgia
PA=Available
post-humanist studies
Post-WWII
Posthumanism
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
Reclaiming Nostalgia
Sense of Place and Sense of Planet
softlaunch
Stephen Greenblatt
The Self
Timothy Morton
Ursula K. Heise
US literature
war
weakness
What is Posthumanism?

Product details

  • ISBN 9781517906542
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2019
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Introducing a posthumanist concept of nostalgia to analyze steadily widening themes of animality, home, travel, slavery, shopping, and war in U.S. literature after 1945

 
In the Anthropocene, as climate change renders environments less stable, the human desire for place underscores the weakness of the individual in the face of the world. In this book, Ryan Hediger introduces a distinctive notion of homesickness, one in which the longing for place demonstrates not only human vulnerability but also intersubjectivity beyond the human. Arguing that this feeling is unavoidable and characteristically posthumanist, Hediger studies the complex mix of attitudes toward home, the homely, and the familiar in an age of resurgent cosmopolitanism, especially eco-cosmopolitanism.

Homesickness closely examines U.S. literature mostly after 1945, including prominent writers such as Annie Proulx, Marilynne Robinson, and Ernest Hemingway, in light of the challenges and themes of the Anthropocene. Hediger argues that our desire for home is shorthand for a set of important hopes worth defending-serious and genuine relationships to places and their biotic regimes and landforms; membership in vital cultures, human and nonhuman; resistance to capital-infused forms of globalization that flatten differences and turn life and place into mere resources. Our homesickness, according to Hediger, is inevitable because the self is necessarily constructed with reference to the material past. Therefore, homesickness is not something to dismiss as nostalgic or reactionary but is rather a structure of feeling to come to terms with and even to cultivate.

Recasting an expansive range of fields through the lens of homesickness-from ecocriticism to animal studies and disability studies, (eco)philosophy to posthumanist theory-Homesickness speaks not only to the desire for a physical structure or place but also to a wide range of longings and dislocations, including those related to subjectivity, memory, bodies, literary form, and language. 

Ryan Hediger is associate professor of English at Kent State University. He is editor of Animals and War: Studies of Europe and North America.

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