The Comedy of Survival: Literary Ecology and a Play EthicSince publication of the first edition more than twenty years ago, The Comedy of Survival has been credited as the founding work in the field of literary ecology, the study of relationships between the literary arts and scientific ecology. Here, Joseph Meeker expands upon his consideration of comedy and tragedy, not as dramatic motifs for humor and sadness but rather as forms of adaptive behavior in the natural world that either promote our survival (comedy) or estrange us from other life forms (tragedy). In this third major edition of his classic work, Meeker examines the role of literature in shaping such behavior. Drawing upon centuries of western writing from Dante to Shakespeare to E. O. Wilson, he demonstrates the universality of comedy in both human and animal behavior and shows how the comic mode helps us to live in harmony with nature. Meeker then defines the tragic view of life, interweaving that behavior with exploitation of the environment. With imagination and flair, the author also introduces the idea of a play ethic, as opposed to a work ethic, and demonstrates the importance of play as a necessary and desirable component of the comic spirit. Within a growing body of environmental literature dealing with spirituality, ethics, ecofeminism, nature writing, and alternative lifestyles, Meeker's is a one-of-a-kind book, combining elements of literary criticism, ethology, New Age thinking, and personal narrative. Full of provocative twists and turns, The Comedy of Survival is a book for literary critics, environmentalists, human ecologists, philosophers, and anthropologists. Many will find much to ponder in this clear explication of how we might become better stewards of the Earth. |
From inside the book
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Page 47
... response , but among humans it merely inspires the escalation of violence . While Hamlet manufactures games , his ... Responses to Aggression Tragic literature has frequently demonstrated that Hamlet and the Animals * 47.
... response , but among humans it merely inspires the escalation of violence . While Hamlet manufactures games , his ... Responses to Aggression Tragic literature has frequently demonstrated that Hamlet and the Animals * 47.
Page 50
... response to an unacceptable world . Both terms are commonly applied to conven- tional literary genres , but both also identify modes of human behavior and systems of human values . Both are currently in use as models for human responses ...
... response to an unacceptable world . Both terms are commonly applied to conven- tional literary genres , but both also identify modes of human behavior and systems of human values . Both are currently in use as models for human responses ...
Page 58
... responses to nature . He can- not reject civilization without rejecting his own humanness , so he seeks a compromise ... response is self - pity and despair at ever resolving the contradictions that he has now discovered to be internal ...
... responses to nature . He can- not reject civilization without rejecting his own humanness , so he seeks a compromise ... response is self - pity and despair at ever resolving the contradictions that he has now discovered to be internal ...
Contents
The Comic Way | 12 |
Tragedy and Related Disasters | 22 |
Hamlet and the Animals | 37 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Comedy of Survival: Literary Ecology and a Play Ethic Joseph W. Meeker No preview available - 1997 |
Common terms and phrases
Achilles action aggression basic Beatrice beautiful become belief biological birds caribou caribou mother century character comedy and play Comedy of Survival comic complex consciousness context conversation create creatures cultural dangerous Dante Dante's death E. O. Wilson Earth ecosystems environmental ethic ethology evil evolution evolutionary history evolutionary psychology experience feel Frank Fraser Darling garden Greek Guildenstern Hamlet Hell human behavior imagination Inferno infinite game instinct intellectual intelligence Karl von Frisch killing Konrad Lorenz Krull Laertes Literary Ecology literature live Lorenz means Meeker mental merely mind models modern moral order murder natural environments pain Paradise pattern picaresque picaresque novels picaro Pinker polarized Polonius Purgatory relationships response Richard Dawkins role scene Sinus Block social society souls species spiders Steven Pinker story storytelling strategy suffering symbolic things tion tradition tragic hero tragic view trans transcend unique University Press Virgil vision York Yossarian