Turkish Ecocriticism
From Neolithic to Contemporary Timescapes
Herausgeber: Oppermann, Serpil; Akilli, Sinan
Turkish Ecocriticism
From Neolithic to Contemporary Timescapes
Herausgeber: Oppermann, Serpil; Akilli, Sinan
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Turkish Ecocriticism affirms the relevance and necessity of Turkish perspectives in environmental literatures and arts, and explores the rich historical and contemporary ecoliterary and ecosocial traditions of Turkey.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Southeast Asian Ecocriticism155,99 €
- Modernism and the Anthropocene127,99 €
- Michael J. GormleyThe End of the Anthropocene119,99 €
- Michael J. GormleyThe End of the Anthropocene48,99 €
- Qianqian ChengLoren Eiseley's Writing across the Nature and Culture Divide120,99 €
- Britta Maria ColligsMaterial Ecocriticism and Sylvan Agency in Speculative Fiction114,99 €
- William WelsteadWriting on sheep156,99 €
-
-
-
Turkish Ecocriticism affirms the relevance and necessity of Turkish perspectives in environmental literatures and arts, and explores the rich historical and contemporary ecoliterary and ecosocial traditions of Turkey.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Lexington Books
- Seitenzahl: 322
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 675g
- ISBN-13: 9781793637031
- ISBN-10: 1793637032
- Artikelnr.: 60076464
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Lexington Books
- Seitenzahl: 322
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 675g
- ISBN-13: 9781793637031
- ISBN-10: 1793637032
- Artikelnr.: 60076464
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Serpil Oppermann is professor of environmental humanities and the director of Environmental Humanities Center at Cappadocia University. Sinan Ak¿ll¿ is assistant professor in the department of English Language and Literature and the director of School of Graduate Studies and Research at Cappadocia University.
Contents Acknowledgements Introduction by Serpil Oppermann and Sinan Ak
ll
Part I: Ancient Nature cultures and Latter-day Ecospirituality Chapter 1: The Contemporary Reflections of Tengrism in Turkish Climate Change Fictions by Fatma Aykanat Chapter 2: Toxic Agentic Legacy in Turkish Waters: From Sacrosanct Bodies to Toxic Bodies of Water by Pelin Kümbet Chapter 3: Turkey's First Ecologist: Cevat
akir Kabaäaçl
, The Fisherman of Halicarnassus by Roger Williams Part II: Urban Ecologies Chapter 4: Irrigating and Weeding the Bostan in Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Turkish Literature by Aleksandar Shopov Chapter 5: Orhan Pamuk's Istanbul: Memories and the City and the Local-Global Tension in Ecocritical Place Studies by Scott Slovic Chapter 6: Urban Ecologies/Urbanatures of
stanbul in Contemporary Turkish Novel by Gül
ah Göçmen Chapter 7: Yäar Kemal's Ecopoetics of the Sea: Loss of Marine Biodiversity in Turkey's Coastal Waters by Adem Balc
Part III: Animals: Past Reflections Chapter 8: Human-Animal Relations in Neolithic Anatolian Art: the Heritage of the Bull by Louise Westling Chapter 9: Ottoman Ecocriticism and Political Ecology: Horse-Human Relationships in Evliya Çelebi and After by Donna Landry Chapter 10: "Then There are the Packs of Dogs": Turkish Street Dogs, Nineteenth-Century British Travelers, and Tourist Wonders by Jeanne Dubino Part IV: Animals: Present Reflections Chapter 11: When Horses and Human Beings Meet in Anatolia: Towards a Critical Examination of the Tradition of Y
lk
Horses by Emre Koyuncu Chapter 12: Writing and Animal(ity) in Contemporary Turkish Fiction by Meliz Ergin Chapter 13: Precarious Lives of Animals and Humans through the Lens of Contemporary Turkish Literature by Özlem Ö
üt Yaz
c
o
lu and Ezgi Hamzaçebi Part V: Ecological Arts, Aesthetics, and Performance Chapter 14: The Ecophobia/Biophilia Spectrum in Turkish Theatre: Anatolian Village Plays and (Karagöz-Hacivat) Shadow Plays by Simon C. Estok and Z. Gizem Y
lmaz Karahan Chapter 15: Postecological Aesthetics and Contemporary Turkish Art in the Anthropocene by Kerim Can Yazgüno
lu Chapter 16: Speculative Ecologies of Plastics in the Environmental Aesthetics of P
nar Yoldä by Burcu Baykan Chapter 17: Spiritus Domus: The Decorum of Ecological-Ecesis by Creativity by Yusuf Eradam About the Editors About the Contributors Index
ll
Part I: Ancient Nature cultures and Latter-day Ecospirituality Chapter 1: The Contemporary Reflections of Tengrism in Turkish Climate Change Fictions by Fatma Aykanat Chapter 2: Toxic Agentic Legacy in Turkish Waters: From Sacrosanct Bodies to Toxic Bodies of Water by Pelin Kümbet Chapter 3: Turkey's First Ecologist: Cevat
akir Kabaäaçl
, The Fisherman of Halicarnassus by Roger Williams Part II: Urban Ecologies Chapter 4: Irrigating and Weeding the Bostan in Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Turkish Literature by Aleksandar Shopov Chapter 5: Orhan Pamuk's Istanbul: Memories and the City and the Local-Global Tension in Ecocritical Place Studies by Scott Slovic Chapter 6: Urban Ecologies/Urbanatures of
stanbul in Contemporary Turkish Novel by Gül
ah Göçmen Chapter 7: Yäar Kemal's Ecopoetics of the Sea: Loss of Marine Biodiversity in Turkey's Coastal Waters by Adem Balc
Part III: Animals: Past Reflections Chapter 8: Human-Animal Relations in Neolithic Anatolian Art: the Heritage of the Bull by Louise Westling Chapter 9: Ottoman Ecocriticism and Political Ecology: Horse-Human Relationships in Evliya Çelebi and After by Donna Landry Chapter 10: "Then There are the Packs of Dogs": Turkish Street Dogs, Nineteenth-Century British Travelers, and Tourist Wonders by Jeanne Dubino Part IV: Animals: Present Reflections Chapter 11: When Horses and Human Beings Meet in Anatolia: Towards a Critical Examination of the Tradition of Y
lk
Horses by Emre Koyuncu Chapter 12: Writing and Animal(ity) in Contemporary Turkish Fiction by Meliz Ergin Chapter 13: Precarious Lives of Animals and Humans through the Lens of Contemporary Turkish Literature by Özlem Ö
üt Yaz
c
o
lu and Ezgi Hamzaçebi Part V: Ecological Arts, Aesthetics, and Performance Chapter 14: The Ecophobia/Biophilia Spectrum in Turkish Theatre: Anatolian Village Plays and (Karagöz-Hacivat) Shadow Plays by Simon C. Estok and Z. Gizem Y
lmaz Karahan Chapter 15: Postecological Aesthetics and Contemporary Turkish Art in the Anthropocene by Kerim Can Yazgüno
lu Chapter 16: Speculative Ecologies of Plastics in the Environmental Aesthetics of P
nar Yoldä by Burcu Baykan Chapter 17: Spiritus Domus: The Decorum of Ecological-Ecesis by Creativity by Yusuf Eradam About the Editors About the Contributors Index
Contents Acknowledgements Introduction by Serpil Oppermann and Sinan Ak
ll
Part I: Ancient Nature cultures and Latter-day Ecospirituality Chapter 1: The Contemporary Reflections of Tengrism in Turkish Climate Change Fictions by Fatma Aykanat Chapter 2: Toxic Agentic Legacy in Turkish Waters: From Sacrosanct Bodies to Toxic Bodies of Water by Pelin Kümbet Chapter 3: Turkey's First Ecologist: Cevat
akir Kabaäaçl
, The Fisherman of Halicarnassus by Roger Williams Part II: Urban Ecologies Chapter 4: Irrigating and Weeding the Bostan in Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Turkish Literature by Aleksandar Shopov Chapter 5: Orhan Pamuk's Istanbul: Memories and the City and the Local-Global Tension in Ecocritical Place Studies by Scott Slovic Chapter 6: Urban Ecologies/Urbanatures of
stanbul in Contemporary Turkish Novel by Gül
ah Göçmen Chapter 7: Yäar Kemal's Ecopoetics of the Sea: Loss of Marine Biodiversity in Turkey's Coastal Waters by Adem Balc
Part III: Animals: Past Reflections Chapter 8: Human-Animal Relations in Neolithic Anatolian Art: the Heritage of the Bull by Louise Westling Chapter 9: Ottoman Ecocriticism and Political Ecology: Horse-Human Relationships in Evliya Çelebi and After by Donna Landry Chapter 10: "Then There are the Packs of Dogs": Turkish Street Dogs, Nineteenth-Century British Travelers, and Tourist Wonders by Jeanne Dubino Part IV: Animals: Present Reflections Chapter 11: When Horses and Human Beings Meet in Anatolia: Towards a Critical Examination of the Tradition of Y
lk
Horses by Emre Koyuncu Chapter 12: Writing and Animal(ity) in Contemporary Turkish Fiction by Meliz Ergin Chapter 13: Precarious Lives of Animals and Humans through the Lens of Contemporary Turkish Literature by Özlem Ö
üt Yaz
c
o
lu and Ezgi Hamzaçebi Part V: Ecological Arts, Aesthetics, and Performance Chapter 14: The Ecophobia/Biophilia Spectrum in Turkish Theatre: Anatolian Village Plays and (Karagöz-Hacivat) Shadow Plays by Simon C. Estok and Z. Gizem Y
lmaz Karahan Chapter 15: Postecological Aesthetics and Contemporary Turkish Art in the Anthropocene by Kerim Can Yazgüno
lu Chapter 16: Speculative Ecologies of Plastics in the Environmental Aesthetics of P
nar Yoldä by Burcu Baykan Chapter 17: Spiritus Domus: The Decorum of Ecological-Ecesis by Creativity by Yusuf Eradam About the Editors About the Contributors Index
ll
Part I: Ancient Nature cultures and Latter-day Ecospirituality Chapter 1: The Contemporary Reflections of Tengrism in Turkish Climate Change Fictions by Fatma Aykanat Chapter 2: Toxic Agentic Legacy in Turkish Waters: From Sacrosanct Bodies to Toxic Bodies of Water by Pelin Kümbet Chapter 3: Turkey's First Ecologist: Cevat
akir Kabaäaçl
, The Fisherman of Halicarnassus by Roger Williams Part II: Urban Ecologies Chapter 4: Irrigating and Weeding the Bostan in Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Turkish Literature by Aleksandar Shopov Chapter 5: Orhan Pamuk's Istanbul: Memories and the City and the Local-Global Tension in Ecocritical Place Studies by Scott Slovic Chapter 6: Urban Ecologies/Urbanatures of
stanbul in Contemporary Turkish Novel by Gül
ah Göçmen Chapter 7: Yäar Kemal's Ecopoetics of the Sea: Loss of Marine Biodiversity in Turkey's Coastal Waters by Adem Balc
Part III: Animals: Past Reflections Chapter 8: Human-Animal Relations in Neolithic Anatolian Art: the Heritage of the Bull by Louise Westling Chapter 9: Ottoman Ecocriticism and Political Ecology: Horse-Human Relationships in Evliya Çelebi and After by Donna Landry Chapter 10: "Then There are the Packs of Dogs": Turkish Street Dogs, Nineteenth-Century British Travelers, and Tourist Wonders by Jeanne Dubino Part IV: Animals: Present Reflections Chapter 11: When Horses and Human Beings Meet in Anatolia: Towards a Critical Examination of the Tradition of Y
lk
Horses by Emre Koyuncu Chapter 12: Writing and Animal(ity) in Contemporary Turkish Fiction by Meliz Ergin Chapter 13: Precarious Lives of Animals and Humans through the Lens of Contemporary Turkish Literature by Özlem Ö
üt Yaz
c
o
lu and Ezgi Hamzaçebi Part V: Ecological Arts, Aesthetics, and Performance Chapter 14: The Ecophobia/Biophilia Spectrum in Turkish Theatre: Anatolian Village Plays and (Karagöz-Hacivat) Shadow Plays by Simon C. Estok and Z. Gizem Y
lmaz Karahan Chapter 15: Postecological Aesthetics and Contemporary Turkish Art in the Anthropocene by Kerim Can Yazgüno
lu Chapter 16: Speculative Ecologies of Plastics in the Environmental Aesthetics of P
nar Yoldä by Burcu Baykan Chapter 17: Spiritus Domus: The Decorum of Ecological-Ecesis by Creativity by Yusuf Eradam About the Editors About the Contributors Index