This paper takes as its starting point the notions of blending and conceptual metaphors in order to advance a new reading of Atwood’s fiction, one which sees it as parabolic stories projecting the conceptual metaphors “man is a wild animal” and “nature is a victim of injury”. Atwood’s Wilderness Tips (1991), The Tent (2006) and the MaddAddam trilogy not only develop their own detailed blueprints of the Canadian fauna, but they also reveal Atwood’s eco-animalism blending together men and animals, and leading to genetic mixing of species. By spending her childhood in the bush among wild bears, silver foxes, otter, weasels and muskrats, Atwood experienced the horrors of animal abuse. I intend to track through these references and look at the issues – attitudes to human crimes against nature, question of animal representations in narrative writing, historical and personal past related to eco-animalism etc. – which they raise. But my central purpose will be to re-read Atwood’s eco-animalism from a cognitive perspective, projecting Atwood’s thoughts on the Canadian waste land, inhabited by genetically modified animals and by Gothicized animal figures. In line with T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, in which thoughts are an entangled mass of animals, Atwood seems to employ new animal metaphors to convey their eco-bond with nature and to denounce all forms of animal exploitation. Through wild bears, aquatic birds, glow-in-the-dark rabbits, friendly, scentless rakunks (half-skunk, half-raccoon), wolvogs, rakunks, liobams, and so forth, I suggest, Atwood attempts to build into her works a kind of eco-warning which T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land extols with important socio-cultural consequences for the Canadian outcasts denouncing in Eliot’s words “those who suffer the ecstasy of the animals”.

“Those who suffer the ecstasy of the animals”. Conceptual Blending and Eco-animalism in Atwood’s Speculative Fiction

SASSO, Eleonora
2015-01-01

Abstract

This paper takes as its starting point the notions of blending and conceptual metaphors in order to advance a new reading of Atwood’s fiction, one which sees it as parabolic stories projecting the conceptual metaphors “man is a wild animal” and “nature is a victim of injury”. Atwood’s Wilderness Tips (1991), The Tent (2006) and the MaddAddam trilogy not only develop their own detailed blueprints of the Canadian fauna, but they also reveal Atwood’s eco-animalism blending together men and animals, and leading to genetic mixing of species. By spending her childhood in the bush among wild bears, silver foxes, otter, weasels and muskrats, Atwood experienced the horrors of animal abuse. I intend to track through these references and look at the issues – attitudes to human crimes against nature, question of animal representations in narrative writing, historical and personal past related to eco-animalism etc. – which they raise. But my central purpose will be to re-read Atwood’s eco-animalism from a cognitive perspective, projecting Atwood’s thoughts on the Canadian waste land, inhabited by genetically modified animals and by Gothicized animal figures. In line with T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, in which thoughts are an entangled mass of animals, Atwood seems to employ new animal metaphors to convey their eco-bond with nature and to denounce all forms of animal exploitation. Through wild bears, aquatic birds, glow-in-the-dark rabbits, friendly, scentless rakunks (half-skunk, half-raccoon), wolvogs, rakunks, liobams, and so forth, I suggest, Atwood attempts to build into her works a kind of eco-warning which T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land extols with important socio-cultural consequences for the Canadian outcasts denouncing in Eliot’s words “those who suffer the ecstasy of the animals”.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
paper wastelands.pdf

Solo gestori archivio

Tipologia: Documento in Post-print
Dimensione 488.31 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
488.31 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11564/667779
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact