Skip to product information
1 of 1

Writing Belonging at the Millennium

Regular price £32.95
Sale price £32.95 Regular price £0.00
Sale Sold out
Writing Belonging at the Millennium brings together two pressing and interrelated matters: the global environmental impacts of post-industrial economies and the politics of place in settler-colonia...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 15 December 2019
View Product Details

In Writing Belonging at the Millennium, Emily Potter critically considers the long-standing settler-colonial pursuit of belonging manifested through an obsession with firm and stable ground. This pursuit continues across the field of the postcolonial nation today; the recognition of colonization’s destructive impacts on humans and environments troublingly generates a renewed desire to secure non-indigenous belonging. Focusing on the crucial role that Australia’s contemporary literature plays in shaping ideas of place and its inhabitation, Potter tracks non-indigenous belonging claims through a range of fiction and non-fiction texts to examine how settler-colonial anxieties about belonging intersect with intensifying environmental challenges. Significantly, she proposes that new understandings of unsettled and uncertain non-indigenous belonging may actually be fruitful context for decolonizing relations with place – something that is imperative in a time of heightened global environmental crisis.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £32.95
Pages: 190
Publisher: Intellect Books
Imprint: Intellect Books
Publication Date: 15 December 2019
Trim Size: 9.60 X 6.70 in
ISBN: 9781841505138
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, Politics and government, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Environmental Economics, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Environmental Policy, LITERARY CRITICISM / General

REVIEWS Icon

'To read Potter’s book is—if you have not already—to begin re-cognising an understanding of the way literary texts by non-Indigenous writers absorb, respond to, repeat and/or critically illuminate social discourses that co-construct historical moments. [...] The challenge is: how, during a time of intensifying ecological disaster, are we to avoid reactivating narratives that re-install and re-naturalise non-Indigenous presence while reaffirming Indigenous dispossession? Writing Belonging at the Millennium will not answer this question for you. But it will provide you with a map of some of what’s been done, and to what effect. I urge you to read this book. It’s clear. It’s urgent. Potter’s work is forensic and generous. There are no arrogant or generalist pronouncements here, no striding across the colonial stage.'

Introduction

Chapter One: Anxious Belonging

Chapter Two: Literary Expectations: Grounding Belonging

Chapter Three: Getting Lost with Nikki Gemmell

Chapter Four: Redeeming Environments

Chapter Five: Desiccated and Infective: Writing in Thea Astley’s Drylands

Chapter Six: The Past is All Around: Chloe Hooper’s A Child’s Book of True Crime

Chapter Seven: Toxic Imaginaries: Undoing Origins and Endings

Afterword