Book contents
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction Hemingway in the New Millennium
- Part I The Textual Hemingway
- Part II Identities
- Part III Global Engagements
- Chapter 12 “There’s No One Thing That’s True”
- Chapter 13 New World Order, Old World Ways
- Chapter 14 Post-“American” Hemingway Studies
- Chapter 15 Politics, Espionage, and Surveillance
- Conclusion
- Works Cited
- Index
Chapter 12 - “There’s No One Thing That’s True”
Hemingway Criticism and the Environmental Humanities
from Part III - Global Engagements
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 August 2020
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction Hemingway in the New Millennium
- Part I The Textual Hemingway
- Part II Identities
- Part III Global Engagements
- Chapter 12 “There’s No One Thing That’s True”
- Chapter 13 New World Order, Old World Ways
- Chapter 14 Post-“American” Hemingway Studies
- Chapter 15 Politics, Espionage, and Surveillance
- Conclusion
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
In “’There’s No One Thing That’s True’: Hemingway Criticism and the Environmental Humanities,“ Lisa Tyler examines the role of Hemingway scholarship in the rise and proliferation of ecocriticism that has accompanied growing anxieties over (and accompanying denial of) climate change since 2000. Noting in particular the groundbreaking work of Susan F. Beegel and essays by the prolific Ryan Hediger, Tyler argues that critics have been appropriately attentive to both the pros and cons of Hemingway’s awareness of nature and conservation. On the one hand he was acutely aware of the ecological devastation of industrialism and yet at the same time he was famous for traveling the world as a collector of animal trophies. Tyler also explores Hemingway’s compatibility with such core ecocritical concepts as “the mesh” and the “anthropocene” while also documenting how contemporary criticism has redefined traditional notions of his pastoralism. She concludes by noting areas that await analysis, including the relevance of climatology to his fiction and of feminist ecology to his depiction of landscape.
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- The New Hemingway Studies , pp. 189 - 203Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020