Nature's State: Imagining Alaska as the Last FrontierUNC Press Books, 2001 - 224 páginas An engaging blend of environmental theory and literary studies, Nature's State looks behind the myth of Alaska as America's "last frontier," a pristine and wild place on the fringes of our geographical imagination. Susan Kollin traces how this seemingly m |
Contenido
Inventing the Last Frontier | 1 |
The Wild Wild North Nature Writing National Ecologies and Alaska | 23 |
Border Fictions Frontier Adventure and the Literature of US Expansion in Canada | 59 |
Domestic Ecologies and the Making of Wilderness White Women Nature Writing and Alaska | 91 |
Beyond the Whiteness of Wilderness Alaska Native Writers and Environmental Sovereignty | 127 |
Toward an Environmental Cultural Studies | 161 |
Notes | 179 |
199 | |
215 | |
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addresses Alaska Days Alaska Native American animals Arctic argues become Brooks Range Canada Canadian captivity concerns critics cultural studies Culture of Nature Curwood Dauenhauer depictions describes discourses discussion Disney domestic ecocriticism ecologies emerged environment environmental movement environmentalists Eskimos Euro-American expansionist experiences explains exploration Exxon Valdez face Fairbanks figure film foregrounds forest frontier adventures functions Glacier Bay global gold rush helped human Ibid ideas ideology imagination imperialism important Indian indigenous industry instance Jack London Juneau Klondike land landscape larger Last Frontier literary living mainstream Margaret Murie Marshall McPhee ment modern Muir Muir's myth narratives nature advocates nature writing North Northern Exposure novel oil spill poem political popular Prince William Sound problems region Rex Beach rhetoric role shaped social somehow space stories struggle TallMountain terrain territorial tion Tlingit tourist U.S. miners United vision West Western White Wilderness white women wild wildlife Yukon