Turkish Ecocriticism affirms the relevance and necessity of Turkish perspectives in environmental literatures and arts, and explores the rich historical and contemporary ecoliterary and ecosocial traditions of Turkey.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction by Serpil Oppermann and Sinan Akilli
Part I: Ancient Nature cultures and Latter-day Ecospirituality
Chapter 1: The Contemporary Reflections of Tengrism in Turkish Climate Change Fictions by Fatma Aykanat
Chapter 2: Toxic Agentic Legacy in Turkish Waters: From Sacrosanct Bodies to Toxic Bodies of Water by Pelin Kümbet
Chapter 3: Turkey's First Ecologist: Cevat Sakir Kabaagaçli, The Fisherman of Halicarnassus by Roger Williams
Part II: Urban Ecologies
Chapter 4: Irrigating and Weeding the Bostan in Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Turkish Literature by Aleksandar Shopov
Chapter 5: Orhan Pamuk's Istanbul: Memories and the City and the Local-Global Tension in Ecocritical Place Studies by Scott Slovic
Chapter 6: Urban Ecologies/Urbanatures of Istanbul in Contemporary Turkish Novel by Gülsah Göçmen
Chapter 7: Yasar Kemal's Ecopoetics of the Sea: Loss of Marine Biodiversity in Turkey's Coastal Waters by Adem Balci
Part III: Animals: Past Reflections
Chapter 8: Human-Ani