Since storytelling began, narratives of getting lost in the woods or of choosing to live in the heterotopian space of the woods have remained popular and are, at the time of writing, experiencing a new revival. The theory of ecopsychology supplies a productive paradigm for understanding mental well-being in a cultural landscape suffused with reimaginings of nature as ‘unspoiled wilderness’. The eco-psychopathologies presented in the essays in this volume range in origin from medieval literature to contemporary films and online games. The classic romantic or gothic trope of getting lost in the forest, but also its recreational function (forest-bathing) reflect mental states humans develop when they step into the culturally constructed entity of the woodland. These ecocritical analyses present different facets of such encounters.

Les mer

The eco-psychopathologies presented in these essays range from medieval literature to contemporary film. The romantic or gothic trope of getting lost in the forest, but also its recreational function (forest-bathing) reflect mental states humans develop when they step into the woodland.

Les mer

Introduction ............................................................................................................. 9

Section 1 – Literature

Feargal Ó Béarra

The Arboreal in Buile Shuibhne ............................................................................ 25

Nick Kankahainen

“A Voice! A Voice!”: The Foucauldian Silence of Mr Kurtz .............................. 41

Elena Campero

A Burst of Magic in the Shadows: The Woods’ in Marosa

di Giorgio’s Poetry .................................................................................................. 59

Maureen O’Connor

“Extremely Nervous on This Earth”: Fairy Tales and Madness in Edna

O’Brien’s in the Forest ............................................................................................. 75

Jennifer Coralie

Kindling Gatherers and Lost Children: The Peopled Forests of Kerstin

Ekman ...................................................................................................................... 91

Helen R. Andretta

Scenes of Mad Pursuits in Allegories by Hawthorne and O’Connor ............ 105

June-Ann Greeley

To Wander in the “Shadowed Land”: The Fearsome Enchantment of

Tolkien’s Woods ...................................................................................................... 119

Section 2 – Visual Media

Pat Brereton

Eco-Sustainability, Nature, Gender and Trees: A Case Study of Avatar,

How Harry Became a Tree, and The Tree of Life .................................................. 145
Brenda S. Gardenour Walter

At the Mercy of the Maddening Mother: Gothic and Medieval

Constructions of the Haunted Forest in Modern Horror Films ...................... 165

Emmanuelle Patrice

Eerie Encounters: The Bewitchery of the Dryads in the Film The Woods ...... 181

Michael Fuchs

When the Forest Is Not Quite What It Seems to Be: The Simulacral

Spaces of “Nature” in The Cabin in the Woods .................................................... 199

Fernando Pagnoni Berns

The Woods Are for the Poor (and Also for Monstrous Beings): Forests

as Liminal Spaces in Spanish Films ..................................................................... 219

Melissa Bianchi

Lost in the Woods: Procedurality and the Uncanny in The Legend of

Zelda Series ............................................................................................................. 233

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783631793398
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Peter Lang AG
Vekt
390 gr
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
P, 06
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
246

Series edited by

Biografisk notat

Tina Karen Pusse, Dr phil (University of Cologne 2004), is a Lecturer of German Literature at NUI Galway, and Associate Director of the Moore Institute. She has published in the areas of environmental humanities, gender studies, modern German poetry, autobiography, theory of laughter.

Heike Schwarz, Dr phil, studied American studies, politics and philosophy. She completed her Ph.D on the representation of psychiatric diagnoses at the University of Augsburg. She publishes in the fields of psychiatry and fiction, film studies, environmental humanities, ecopsychology, medical humanities, dementia and disability studies.

Rebecca Downes, PhD (NUI Galway 2017), works as an editor and independent scholar. Her dissertation on Mortality in late works by John Banville, Philip Roth and J. M. Coetzee was funded by the Irish Research Council. She has published on death in contemporary fiction, John Banville and Philip Roth.