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Displaying results 76 to 100 of 119.
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An Eclectic Bestiary
Encounters in a More-than-Human World -
Animal encounters
Kontakt, Interaktion und Relationalität -
Coming to Terms: The Poetics of More-than-human Worlds
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Holding on to Proteus; or, Toward a Poetics of Gaia
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Eco-Animal Assemblages in Contemporary French Thought
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Narrating le vivant: the Zoe-Poetical Hypothesis
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The Beetle Is in the Eye of the Beholder: Animal Ecologies, Situated Poetics and the Poetry of Annette von Droste-Hülshoff
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Action, Framework, and the Poetics of “Co-Making”: A Testing Device for Ecological Narratives
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Other Environments: Ecocriticism and Science Fiction (Lem, Ballard, Dath)
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Return to the Fable: Rethinking a Genre Neglected in Animal Studies and Ecocriticism
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Peirce on the Continuity between Human and Nonhuman Minds
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“Il n’y a pas de chats”: Feline Absence and/as the Space of Zoopoetics
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How to Disappear Completely: Poetics of Extinction in Max Frisch’s Man in the Holocene
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The Traces Animals Leave: A Zoopoetic Study of Rick Bass’ “Antlers”
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Cross-Pollinating: Indigenous Frictions and Honeybee Fictions
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“Piping in their honey dreams”: Towards a Creaturely Ecopoetics
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Wolves and Wolf Men as Literary Tropes and Figures of Thought: Eco- and Zoopoetic Perspectives on Jiang Rong’s Wolf Totem and Other Wolf Narratives
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Empathy, Violence, and Guilt in a Girl-Chimp Experiment: An Analysis of Human-Animal Relations in Karen Joy Fowler’s Novel We Are Completely Beside Ourselves (2013)
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(Not) Speaking for Animals and the Environment: Zoopoetics and Ecopoetics in Yoko Tawada’s Memoirs of a Polar Bear
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Blooming Flowers, Fish in Water, Amphibians, and Apes: Herder’s Environmental Aesthetics of Nature
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“The jellyfish must have precedence!”: The Diaphanous Animal as an Optical Medium
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Ants and Battlefields, Beetles and Landscapes: Rudiments for a Naturalistic Reading of Ernst Jünger’s Interwar Essays through the Lens of His Later Entomological Hermeneutics
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W. G. Sebald’s Zoopoetics: Writing after Nature
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The Rabbits of Okunoshima: How Feral Rabbits Alter Space, Create Relationships, and Communicate with People and Each Other
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A Darwinism of the Muck and Mire: Decomposing the Eco- and Zoopoetics of Stephen Collis’ and Jordan Scott’s decomp