![]() Copyright © 2012 by University of Massachusetts Press All rights reserved. In examining their work, Knickerbocker charts a new direction for ecocriticism. Rather than attempt to erase the artifice of their own poems, to make them seem more natural and thus supposedly closer to nature, the poets in this book unapologetically embrace artifice-not for its own sake but in order to perform and enact the natural world. Each of these poets, in his or her own distinct way, employs instead what Knickerbocker terms sensuous poesis, the process of rematerializing language through sound effects and other formal devices as a sophisticated response to nonhuman nature. These poets relate to nature as a deep wellspring of meaning, although they all avoid using language the way most nature writers do, merely to reflect or refer directly to the world. Ecopoetics probes the complex relationship between artifice and the natural world in the work of modern American poets-in particular Wallace Stevens, Elizabeth Bishop, Richard Wilbur, and Sylvia Plath. In this book, Scott Knickerbocker argues that it is time for the next step in ecocriticism: scholars need to explore the figurative and aural capacity of language to evoke the natural world in powerful ways. Ecocritics and other literary scholars interested in the environment have tended to examine writings that pertain directly to nature and to focus on subject matter more than expression. ![]()
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