“I Have This Kind of Grief for the Earth”: A.S. Byatt’s Ecopoetics in Ragnarök, “Thoughts on Myth” and “Sea Story” Cover Image
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“I Have This Kind of Grief for the Earth”: A.S. Byatt’s Ecopoetics in Ragnarök, “Thoughts on Myth” and “Sea Story”
“I Have This Kind of Grief for the Earth”: A.S. Byatt’s Ecopoetics in Ragnarök, “Thoughts on Myth” and “Sea Story”

Author(s): Alexandra Cheira
Subject(s): Fiction, Human Ecology, Environmental interactions, British Literature
Published by: Editura Universitatii LUCIAN BLAGA din Sibiu
Keywords: A.S. Byatt; contemporary fiction; ecocriticism; F.R. Leavis; the organic community; the narrator’s fixed gaze; proto-ecocritical writing; Ragnarök: The End of the Gods; “Sea Story”; verbal painting;

Summary/Abstract: A.S. Byatt has expressed deep misgivings regarding the role which the human species has played in mis/shaping the natural world due to the willful blindness which guides human behaviour in this respect. In fact, Byatt has focused on the destruction of the planet caused by greedy and environmentally-unaware human beings in fictional texts such as Ragnarök: The End of the Gods (2011) or “Sea Story” (2013), as well as in critical pieces such as “Thoughts on Myth” (2011). Hence, I am particularly interested in investigating how Byatt’s texts have been shaped by environmental concerns, as expressed in both her fiction and her critical work. My reading of Byatt’s ecopoetics will therefore be set within the theoretical framework of ecocriticism. Finally, I will also examine Byatt’s argument that in a way her early fictional work was “a questioning quarrel” with her former Cambridge teacher F.R. Leavis’s, whose “vision and values” she nevertheless “inherit[s] and share[s]” (Passions of the Mind, 2) in light of Leavis’s discussion of “the organic community” as proto-ecocritical writing.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 35
  • Page Range: 44-67
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English