Prologue
Introduction - Ultradeep, Petroleum Culture in the American
Century
Chapter 1 - Origins, Spills
Chapter 2 - The Aesthetics of Petroleum
Chapter 3 - Petromelancholia
Chapter 4 - The Petroleum Archive
Epilogue
Appendix
Notes
Index
Stephanie LeMenager is Moore Endowed Professor of English at the University of Oregon.
"LeMenager is one of our most incisive and inventive critics,
period, and Living Oil is the cutting edge of what literary and
cultural criticism is and might be. It's the kind of book to
recommend to graduate students, regardless of field, as a model of
what's possible in the discipline, or to keep close at hand for
inspiration." --Contemporary Literature
"[LeMenager] takes an experimental, avowedly essayistic and often
intensely personal approach to her subject. This accounts for many
of the book's considerable strengths..." --Green Letters: Studies
in Ecocriticism
"Not only does Living Oil take on the super wicked problem of oil
with candor, humor, theoretical depth, historical precision, and a
rare blend of critical ambition and down-to-earthness, but the book
fashions a type of scholarship that is beautifully adapted to the
subject: as heteroglossic and bioregionally situated as oil
industry self-representations are monoglossic and disembodied; as
deeply invested in nimble realism, self-questioning, dialogue,
and cultural resilience as post-oil narratives are (frequently)
mired in grim certainties and despair. The first 'petrocritical'
monograph written from an ecocritical standpoint, Living Oil sets a
high bar for
future scholars." --The Goose
"The book is a leisurely road trip through twentieth-century US
media and culture, and LeMenager's goal--'to consider how the story
of petroleum has come to play a foundational role in the American
imagination and therefore in the future of life on earth'--is
accomplished not only through linear argumentation but purposeful
meditation. The seepage of fossil fuels into every aspect of our
lives suffuses the pages and washes over the reader."
--American
Quarterly
"For LeMenager, the everywhereness of oil presents a problem of
materialization, a problem of how to make the everywhere and the
ordinary visible. This materialization of oil is necessary, she
writes, if we are to lay bare Americans' ultradeep attachment to a
resource they know will soon betray them--a relationship LeMenager
fascinatingly describes as 'bad love.' LeMenager's remarkable book
keeps faith in narrative as a tool for materializing 'the ecologies
of
modernity' and thus one that can 'contribute to a future that
challenges Tough Oil.'" -- American Literature
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