Great Writers of the West: John Steinbeck and the Environment (ArtsWest 2017)
Автор: Bill Lane Center Stanford
Загружено: 2017-05-18
Просмотров: 30486
Presentations from the ArtsWest symposium at Stanford University on May 10, 2017.
The world seemed on the brink of catastrophe when John Steinbeck published The Grapes of Wrath in 1939. Today we are confronted with our own cataclysmic moment in time. Steinbeck’s compassionate explorations of inequality, poverty-induced human migration, and environmental degradation yield insights we are at pains to grasp. As perhaps no other novelist before or since, Steinbeck had a fundamental ecological awareness. He shows us that people are not separate from the land on which we tread, and in fact share a common fate.
Living Steinbeck by Valentin Lopez, Amah Mutsun Tribal Band
The Ecology of Humans by William Souder, Writer
"We Ain't Foreign:" Race, Land, and Nation in Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrathby Sarah Wald, University of Oregon, Department of English and Environmental Studies Program
Sea of Cortez and the 'Toto Picture' by Mary Ellen Hannibal, Writer
Animal, Vegetable, Mineral by Gavin Jones, Stanford University, Department of English
Steinbeck's Holism, Susan Shillinglaw, National Steinbeck Center
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