Resisting Nature Poetry in the Anthropocene: On the Ecopoetics of Brian Teare and Juliana Spahr

dc.contributor.advisorTriplett, Pimone
dc.contributor.authorWagner, Tyler Jay
dc.date.accessioned2020-08-14T03:29:23Z
dc.date.issued2020-08-14
dc.date.submitted2020
dc.descriptionThesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2020
dc.description.abstractThis paper attends to the ecologically committed work of Brian Teare and Juliana Spahr, two poets whose ecopoems respond to the nature poem, a genre of poetry that often supplants ecological specificity with a generalized nature, ultimately fetishizing a nonexistent agrarian ideal and alienating readers’ experiences of place. By performing close readings of these poets’ work and situating their poems alongside contemporary philosophies of the Anthropocene, I examine not only how Teare and Spahr attempt to reproduce the fragmented experience of living in the Anthropocene but also how their poems encourage the mobilization of reading publics by combatting anthropocentrism and imagining potential futures, futures predicated on livability and equity across species.
dc.embargo.lift2022-08-04T03:29:23Z
dc.embargo.termsRestrict to UW for 2 years -- then make Open Access
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherWagner_washington_0250O_21549.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1773/45969
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.rightsnone
dc.subjectAnthropocene
dc.subjectBrian Teare
dc.subjectEcopoetics
dc.subjectJuliana Spahr
dc.subjectNature Poetry
dc.subjectPoetry
dc.subjectCreative writing
dc.subject.otherEnglish
dc.titleResisting Nature Poetry in the Anthropocene: On the Ecopoetics of Brian Teare and Juliana Spahr
dc.typeThesis

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