Artigo Revisado por pares

Margaret Atwood’s Straddling Environmentalism

2015; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 13; Issue: 1-2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1179/1477570015z.00000000097

ISSN

1741-2676

Autores

Alice Ridout,

Tópico(s)

Contemporary Literature and Criticism

Resumo

“Margaret Atwood’s Straddling Environmentalism” asks why Atwood crosses the Canada-US border in her dystopian fiction. It takes Atwood’s 2004 comments that The Handmaid’s Tale (1985) partly grew out of her ‘irritation when people say “it can’t happen here”’ and her claim that she decided to set the novel in Cambridge, Massachusetts as being related to that irritation—’”It can’t happen here,” she explained, “should be placed in the most extreme ‘here”’—as a prompt. Focusing on Oryx and Crake (2003), this article argues that one of Atwood’s motivations for crossing the Canada-US border in this novel is to provoke us to develop what Giovanna Di Chiro has termed ‘a scale-crossing environmental consciousness.’ Oryx and Crake challenges us to think about environmentalism in relation to local, embodied experiences as well as on a global, transnational scale.

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