Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics

This thesis looks at the poetry and conceptual apparatus of four poets working in French and English during the past several decades who develop distinct poetic epistemes following precepts of natural and cultural ecology and comparativism. It questions how their poetics merges the comparative pract...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: La Vedrine, Sam
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56978/
_version_ 1848799414841245696
author La Vedrine, Sam
author_facet La Vedrine, Sam
author_sort La Vedrine, Sam
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis looks at the poetry and conceptual apparatus of four poets working in French and English during the past several decades who develop distinct poetic epistemes following precepts of natural and cultural ecology and comparativism. It questions how their poetics merges the comparative practice of analogy with ecological discourse to highlight an intersection of the politics and aesthetics of a planetary space under threat, simultaneously, from destructive treatment of the Earth and globalisation’s exclusive representations and effacements of difference. Surveying the emergence of literary ecocriticism, recent cultural or philosophical ecologies, and their imbrication with current debates in comparative literature, I argue that the formation of a materialist ecology of separation based on poiesis helps make conceptual distinctions within the Earth’s space, as relies on the advocation neither of absolute interconnection – dwelling – nor radical distancing – displacement. Accordingly, a specific poetic identity of subjective creation measures different scalar expressions of planetary existence as paradoxes of what I describe as the groundless dwelling of ecological comparativism. Crossing questions of difference, finitude, equivalence, and necessity and contingency, poetry’s analogy, metaphor, image, and figure subsequently reflect ideas from spatial topology, ecological sciences, post-colonial theory, and contemporary philosophy to form a speculative poetic thinking intersecting natural and cultural ecology and creative and critical comparativism. Comprising of any relation that is theoretically self-other, poetry’s comparison helps form identity in planetary space through ecology’s premise of interconnection and interdependence. However, reflecting meaning’s relativism and its production, circulation, and reception, a materialist ecology of separation inverts interconnection to form non-dialectical relations maintaining difference modelled on poetry’s analogical apparatus. Arguing that any ecological epistemology must be simultaneously comparative, this is read in a series of self-other relations – space, place, language, and alterity itself – in Kenneth White’s geopoetics, Édouard Glissant’s poetics of Relation, Pierre Joris’ nomadic poetics, and Michel Deguy’s poetic ecology.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:35:18Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-56978
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:35:18Z
publishDate 2019
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-569782025-02-28T14:34:52Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56978/ Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics La Vedrine, Sam This thesis looks at the poetry and conceptual apparatus of four poets working in French and English during the past several decades who develop distinct poetic epistemes following precepts of natural and cultural ecology and comparativism. It questions how their poetics merges the comparative practice of analogy with ecological discourse to highlight an intersection of the politics and aesthetics of a planetary space under threat, simultaneously, from destructive treatment of the Earth and globalisation’s exclusive representations and effacements of difference. Surveying the emergence of literary ecocriticism, recent cultural or philosophical ecologies, and their imbrication with current debates in comparative literature, I argue that the formation of a materialist ecology of separation based on poiesis helps make conceptual distinctions within the Earth’s space, as relies on the advocation neither of absolute interconnection – dwelling – nor radical distancing – displacement. Accordingly, a specific poetic identity of subjective creation measures different scalar expressions of planetary existence as paradoxes of what I describe as the groundless dwelling of ecological comparativism. Crossing questions of difference, finitude, equivalence, and necessity and contingency, poetry’s analogy, metaphor, image, and figure subsequently reflect ideas from spatial topology, ecological sciences, post-colonial theory, and contemporary philosophy to form a speculative poetic thinking intersecting natural and cultural ecology and creative and critical comparativism. Comprising of any relation that is theoretically self-other, poetry’s comparison helps form identity in planetary space through ecology’s premise of interconnection and interdependence. However, reflecting meaning’s relativism and its production, circulation, and reception, a materialist ecology of separation inverts interconnection to form non-dialectical relations maintaining difference modelled on poetry’s analogical apparatus. Arguing that any ecological epistemology must be simultaneously comparative, this is read in a series of self-other relations – space, place, language, and alterity itself – in Kenneth White’s geopoetics, Édouard Glissant’s poetics of Relation, Pierre Joris’ nomadic poetics, and Michel Deguy’s poetic ecology. 2019-12-18 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56978/1/Revised%20Thesis%20%5B1%5D.pdf La Vedrine, Sam (2019) Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Poetic epistemes; Ecological discourse; Comparative literature; Ecological epistemology; Literary ecocriticism
spellingShingle Poetic epistemes; Ecological discourse; Comparative literature; Ecological epistemology; Literary ecocriticism
La Vedrine, Sam
Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics
title Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics
title_full Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics
title_fullStr Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics
title_full_unstemmed Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics
title_short Ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary French and English poetics
title_sort ecology and comparativism: planetary space between dwelling and displacement in contemporary french and english poetics
topic Poetic epistemes; Ecological discourse; Comparative literature; Ecological epistemology; Literary ecocriticism
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56978/