“Gardening in Eden”Wasted Lives, or Detoxic Identities in Gail AndersonDargatz’s Turtle Valley and Barbara Kingsolver’s Prodigal Summer

  1. Pedro Miguel Carmona Rodríguez 1
  1. 1 Universidad de La Laguna
    info

    Universidad de La Laguna

    San Cristobal de La Laguna, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01r9z8p25

Zeitschrift:
Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses

ISSN: 0211-5913

Datum der Publikation: 2023

Titel der Ausgabe: Toxic Tales: Narratives of Waste in Postindustrial North America / Relatos tóxicos: Narrativas de Waste en la Norteamérica posindustrial

Nummer: 86

Seiten: 53-69

Art: Artikel

DOI: 10.25145/J.RECAESIN.2023.86.04 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openRIULL editor

Andere Publikationen in: Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses

Zusammenfassung

This paper analyzes the inflection of a border-crossing ecological concern on the regional cultures of settlement through Gail Anderson-Dargatz’s Turtle Valley (2007) and Barbara Kingsolver’s Prodigal Summer (2000). Their engagement with the contingent position of the farmers in the British Columbia Shuswap region, and the southern Appalachian Zebulon County resituates the self. The struggle for production is substituted by a revisionist attitude that relocates (wo)men and nature in a sustainable coexistence that approaches the human species and others. The ecological awareness of these novels uses a postindustrial landscape where human bodies and lives exhibit the malaise inflicted on the environment; they increasingly become waste(d) and toxic, and their habitat becomes a threat, also materialized in (post)natural catastrophes impelling the relocation of human communities, or business reinvention. The human wastification of Eden is instrumental to launch a revision that detoxifies identity thanks to a remodeled bond with nature.