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Ecology and Epiphany in Short Fiction by Zadie Smith and Joyce Carol Oates

Barrow, Barbara LU (2022) In Ecocene: Cappodocia Journal of Environmental Humanities 3(2). p.34-123
Abstract
This essay investigates ecological epiphany in short stories by Zadie Smith and Joyce Carol Oates, moments in which characters confront the link between their own consumption habits and planetary damage. These moments build on a longer literary history of epiphany in modern fiction, a history that foregrounds suddenness, physicality, and the mundane, but these short stories also adapt epiphany to address prominent concerns about anthropogenic climate change in the twenty-first century. Through close readings of Smith’s “The Dialectic” (2019), Smith’s “The Lazy River” (2017), and Oates’s “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” (2019), I show how these stories’ ecological epiphanies invite the reader to emotionally confront the urgency of the... (More)
This essay investigates ecological epiphany in short stories by Zadie Smith and Joyce Carol Oates, moments in which characters confront the link between their own consumption habits and planetary damage. These moments build on a longer literary history of epiphany in modern fiction, a history that foregrounds suddenness, physicality, and the mundane, but these short stories also adapt epiphany to address prominent concerns about anthropogenic climate change in the twenty-first century. Through close readings of Smith’s “The Dialectic” (2019), Smith’s “The Lazy River” (2017), and Oates’s “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” (2019), I show how these stories’ ecological epiphanies invite the reader to emotionally confront the urgency of the climate crisis and to take action. While important arguments by Amitav Ghosh and Rob Nixon argue that literature must make planetary crisis visible, Smith’s and Oates’s short stories suggest that some contemporary writers now face a different issue, not a need to heighten the visibility of the damage, but rather a need to psychologically confront its terrible obviousness. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
cli-fi, short fiction, denial, epiphany, climate change, species loss, emotion, ecofeminism
in
Ecocene: Cappodocia Journal of Environmental Humanities
volume
3
issue
2
pages
14 pages
publisher
Cappadocia University
ISSN
2717-8943
DOI
10.46863/ecocene.78
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
6543ecf5-8e4e-4af9-b4df-061593eae663
alternative location
https://ecocene.kapadokya.edu.tr/index.php/ecocene/article/view/125/120
date added to LUP
2023-01-25 18:46:35
date last changed
2023-01-27 11:32:40
@article{6543ecf5-8e4e-4af9-b4df-061593eae663,
  abstract     = {{This essay investigates ecological epiphany in short stories by Zadie Smith and Joyce Carol Oates, moments in which characters confront the link between their own consumption habits and planetary damage. These moments build on a longer literary history of epiphany in modern fiction, a history that foregrounds suddenness, physicality, and the mundane, but these short stories also adapt epiphany to address prominent concerns about anthropogenic climate change in the twenty-first century. Through close readings of Smith’s “The Dialectic” (2019), Smith’s “The Lazy River” (2017), and Oates’s “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” (2019), I show how these stories’ ecological epiphanies invite the reader to emotionally confront the urgency of the climate crisis and to take action. While important arguments by Amitav Ghosh and Rob Nixon argue that literature must make planetary crisis visible, Smith’s and Oates’s short stories suggest that some contemporary writers now face a different issue, not a need to heighten the visibility of the damage, but rather a need to psychologically confront its terrible obviousness.}},
  author       = {{Barrow, Barbara}},
  issn         = {{2717-8943}},
  keywords     = {{cli-fi; short fiction; denial; epiphany; climate change; species loss; emotion; ecofeminism}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{34--123}},
  publisher    = {{Cappadocia University}},
  series       = {{Ecocene: Cappodocia Journal of Environmental Humanities}},
  title        = {{Ecology and Epiphany in Short Fiction by Zadie Smith and Joyce Carol Oates}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.46863/ecocene.78}},
  doi          = {{10.46863/ecocene.78}},
  volume       = {{3}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}