Volume 61 (2016), Issue 4
Environmental Imaginaries on the Move: Nature and Mobility in American Literature and Culture. Christine Gerhardt and Christa Grewe-Volpp (Guest Editors)
Contents
Contents open-access
Articles
Introduction open-access
Page 413 - 420
Imagining a Mobile Sense of Place open-access
Towards an Ecopoetics of Mobility
Page 421 - 443
From Planar Perspectives to a Planetary Poetics open-access
Aeromobility, Technology, and the Environmental Imaginary in Contemporary American Poetry
Page 445 - 467
From “Wall-Flower” to “Queen of the Forest” open-access
Frontier Migration, Nature, and Early Ecofeminism in Caroline Kirkland’s “A New Home, Who’ll Follow? ” (1839)
Page 469 - 488
From an Ethics of Proximity to an Ethics of Connectivity open-access
Risk, Mobility, and Deterritorialization in Barbara Kingsolver’s “Flight Behavior”
Page 489 - 505
Made to Move, Made of this Place open-access
“Into America”, Mobility, and the Eco-Logics of Settler Colonialism
Page 507 - 525
“Zombies Don’t Recognize Borders” open-access
Capitalism, Ecology, and Mobility in the Zombie Outbreak Narrative
Page 527 - 544
Reviews
Reviews open-access
Page 545