Two exercises in consilience: Annie Dillard and Kurt Vonnegut on the Galapagos Archipelago as the archetypal Darwinian setting
Two exercises in consilience: Annie Dillard and Kurt Vonnegut on the Galapagos Archipelago as the archetypal Darwinian setting
Author(s): Dominika OramusSubject(s): Literary Texts
Published by: Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Keywords: prose fiction; Anne Dillard; Kurt Vonnegut; Charles Darwin; the Galapagos Islands; science-fiction; social satire
Summary/Abstract: The aim of this essay is to compare how Darwinian references are used in the writings of two late 20th century American authors, Annie Dillard and Kurt Vonnegut who both choose the Galapagos archipelago as the focal setting of their symbolical narratives, as we see in Vonnegut’s novel Gala´pagos and in Dillard’s essay ‘‘Life on the Rock: the Gala´pagos.” As far as Dillard’s prose is concerned, she also depicts the archipelago in other short narratives from Teaching a Stone to Talk and Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. Although neither Dillard nor Vonnegut have a conspicuously political agenda, they both consider the theory of evolution a heavily ideological subject and both apply the Darwinian paradigm to describe nature and the human race within nature.
Journal: ANGLICA - An International Journal of English Studies
- Issue Year: 23/2014
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 19-29
- Page Count: 11
- Language: English