Entangled Species: The Inclusive Posthumanist Ecopoetics of Juliana Spahr

Auteurs

  • Tana Jean Welch The Florida State University College of Medicine

Mots-clés :

ecopoetics, posthumanism, colonialism, Juliana Spahr

Résumé

In her most recent collection, Well Then There Now (2011), Juliana Spahr promotes an inclusive posthumanist ethics by composing poetry that adopts the complex patterns of nature, a poetry that models the shared, connective spaces we inhabit with others. Reacting to our contemporary moment of intense globalization and economic imperialism, and the environmental changes accompanying these giant social forces, Spahr conducts investigations of and through language in order to become more fully aware of the interconnections between self and others; and between self, others and environment, including how material interconnections shape our social and cultural conditions. Through her signature use of Steinian repetition and parataxis—alongside a process of cutting up, hashing, and recycling text—Spahr looks critically at the systemic intersection of all organisms, including the artificial or non-living other. As this essay argues, by emphasizing points of convergence between human, machine, and animal, Spahr’s inclusive poetics teaches us how to live intersectionally with respect and regard for other species, and encourages us to acknowledge our existence as co-existence.

Biographie de l'auteur

Tana Jean Welch, The Florida State University College of Medicine

Tana Jean Welch is a poet and scholar of contemporary American poetry. She received her Ph.D. in Literature from Florida State University in 2013, specializing in American poetry and poetics, posthumanism, and ecocriticism. She is currently Visiting Assistant Professor of Literature and Medicine at the Florida State University College of Medicine.

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Publiée

2014-01-25

Comment citer

Welch, T. J. (2014). Entangled Species: The Inclusive Posthumanist Ecopoetics of Juliana Spahr. Journal of Ecocriticism, 6(1), 1–25. Consulté à l’adresse https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/502