1. Acknowledgments
2. Scott Slovic, Swarnalatha Rangarajan, and Vidya Sarveswaran,
Introduction
Part 1. Conceptualizing Convergence: Econarratology and Narrative
Medicine, Graphic Medicine and Environmental Texts, Virology, Grey
Ecology, and Ecopsychology
3. Eric Morel, Narrative Knowing and Narrative Practice
4. Mita Banerjee, Black Lives Matter in Flint, Michigan
5. Sathyaraj Venkatesan and Chinmay Murali, Graphic Medicine,
Ecological Consciousness
6. Maria Whiteman, Fungi Umwelt
7. Z. Gizem Yilmaz Karahan, Contagious History
8. Lars Schmeink, The Grey Ecology of Zombie Fiction
9. Tathagata Som, Climate Change and Grief
10. Samantha Walton, Eco-Recovery Memoir and the Medical
Environmental Humanities
Part 2. Environmental Toxicity and Public Health
11. Sofia Varino, Pathogenic (Auto)Ecologies
12. Robin Chen-hsing Tsai, Toward an Ethics of Transcorporeality
and Public Health in Taiwanese Ecopathodocumentary
13. Heather Leigh Ramos, Resisting Slow Violence, Environmental
Toxins, and Systemic Racism
14. Kathryn Yalan Chang, 'Reframing Care’ in the Age of a Novel
Corona Virus
15. Nikoleta Zampaki, Poetry and Art in the Age of Anthropocene
Part 3. Varieties of Entanglement: Landscapes, Bodyscapes, Micro-
and Macro-biota
16. Susanne Lettow, Health, Disease, and the Body in Ecofeminist
Theory
17. Jorge Marcone, A Gut Feeling
18. Henry Obi Ajumeze, Performing Damaged Land/Body-scape in the
Niger Delta
19. Chia-ju Chang, Pathological Mimesis and Buddhist Phármakon in
the Anthropocene Pandemic
20. Françoise Besson, Fighting the Spread of Disease through
Words
21. Animesh Roy, From the Clinical to the Ecocultural
Part 4. Exemplifying Specific Cultural Approaches to the
Convergences of Environment, Health, and the Arts
22. Raghul V. Rajan, Ayurvedic Vision on Health and Environment
23. Animesh Mohapatra and Jyotirmaya Tripathy, Health and Hygiene
Discourses in the Early Twentieth Century
24. Marcos Colón, (Un)sustainable Ecology
25. Chinonye Ekwueme-Ugwu, Nature and Traditional Medicine in
Chinua Achebe’s Arrow of God and Things Fall Apart
26. Kiu-wai Chu, The Tales of Chinese Herbs
27. John Charles Ryan, ‘Into the Sap Stream’
28. Fazila Derya Agis, Turkish Classical Songs’ Lyrics and Related
Idioms for a Literary Therapy for Curing Ecodepression
29. Tess Maginess, Expressing Concepts of Environment through
Concepts of Madness in Some Irish Literature
30. Epilogue: Our Bodies, Our Minds, Our Planet
Scott Slovic, You Don’t Know What You Got ‘Til It’s Gone
Swarnalatha Rangarajan, The Gasping Turtle and Other Hypoxia
Narratives: Prana in a Threatened World
Vidya Sarveswaran, Dying to Breathe
Foundational, field-defining book that brings together two parallel and occasionally intersecting disciplines: the environmental and medical humanities.
Scott Slovic is University Distinguished Professor of
Environmental Humanities and has been teaching at the University of
Idaho, USA, since 2012—previously he was a professor at Texas State
University and the University of Nevada, Reno. He served as
founding president of the Association for the Study of Literature
and Environment (ASLE) from 1992 to 1995, and since 1995 he has
edited ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and
Environment for ASLE and Oxford University Press. He is the author,
editor, or co-editor of twenty-seven books, including, most
recently, The Routledge Handbook of Ecocriticism and Environmental
Communication (with Swarnalatha Rangarajan and Vidya Sarveswaran).
His forthcoming books include Nature in Literary Studies (coedited
with Peter Remien) for Cambridge University Press’s Critical
Concepts Series. He coedits Routledge Studies in World Literatures
and the Environment with Swarnalatha Rangarajan and Routledge
Environmental Humanities with Joni Adamson and Yuki Masami.
Swarnalatha Rangarajan is Associate Professor of English and
has been teaching at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras
since 2010. Previously, she was a Fulbright Pre-Doctoral Fellow at
Harvard University and a Charles Wallace Fellow at Cambridge
University. She has coedited such books as Ecoambiguity, Community,
and Development: Toward a Politicized Ecocriticism (2014) and
Ecocriticism of the Global South (2015) (with Scott Slovic and
Vidya Sarveswaran) and is the author of the novel Final
Instructions (2015). She served as the founding editor of The
Indian Journal of Ecocriticism and has guest-edited two special
issues on Indian ecosophy for The Trumpeter. Her monograph
Ecocriticism: Big Ideas and Practical Solutions appeared in
2018.
Vidya Sarveswaran is Professor of English and has been
teaching at the Indian Institute of Technology Jodhpur since 2012.
Before that she taught for thirteen years at Ethiraj College for
Women in Chennai. She was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of
Nevada, Reno, in 2008-09, and in 2016 she was a Rachel Carson
Fellow at the University of Munich. As mentioned above, she
coedited Ecoambiguity, Community, and Development, Ecocriticism of
the Global South, and The Routledge Handbook of Ecocriticism and
Environmental Communication with Scott Slovic and Swarnalatha
Rangarajan. She is also a documentary filmmaker and has recently
been completing a film that documents ecological narratives in
Rajasthan.
The first of its kind at the intersection of the titular fields, is
a timely and welcome contribution to bridge the gap between
medical, environmental, and literary-cultural studies. ... the
medical-environmental humanities have its new reference guide for
graduate students and scholars in the field.
*Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and
Environment*
This volume proves an invaluable addition to the study of narrative
medicine and public health, and the links between the clinical and
the ecocultural. With a fascinating array of cultures and
approaches, the essays offer a full-belly intervention into the
field.
*Journal of Ecohumanism*
This collection offers a crucial intervention at an urgent time.
The pandemic has driven home the inseparability of human health and
environmental health. The first to bring together the medical and
environmental humanities in a global conversation, this book
outlines how we might better align the health of the planet with
the health of human minds and bodies.
*Sarah Jaquette Ray, Professor and Chair of Environmental Studies,
Humboldt State University, USA, and author of 'A Field Guide to
Climate Anxiety: How to Keep Your Cool on a Warming Planet'*
Located at a crucial juncture in the precarious age when ‘health’ –
of individuals, communities and the planet – is at risk, this
volume defines the future of academic work in environmental and
medical-health humanities. Mapping debates and methodologies across
literary-cultural studies, this is an indispensable exploration as
to the importance of human and nonhuman lives.
*Pramod K Nayar, University of Hyderabad India, author of 'Bhopal’s
Ecological Gothic' and 'Ecoprecarity'*
Together, the dozens of fascinating and insightful essays included
in Slovic, Rangarajan, and Sarveswaran’s Handbook to the
Medical-Environmental Humanities do much more than explore
convergences between two closely related yet seldom intersecting
fields. They additionally chart timely and welcome paths for news
ways of engaging with global challenges – including pandemics and
climate disruption – that are becoming only more severe.
*Karen Thornber, Harry Tuchman Levin Professor in Literature and
Professor of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, Harvard
University, USA, author of 'Ecoambiguity' and 'Global Healing'*
This handbook is an important contribution to the ongoing research
in the medical humanities, health humanities, and environmental
humanities, and it will be of interest to both academic and general
audiences who are trying to understand the precarious present and
work to secure a healthy future for all.
*Amerikastudien*
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