Louise Economides is a Professor of English and Director of Literature and the Environment at the University of Montana, USA.
""Economides's Wild Anthropocene engages deep time with brilliance, nuance, and attention to detail. Her lucid analyses of both environmental poetry and fiction persuasively demonstrate the power of literature in rethinking the human and positioning different human communities in relation to geological time, biodiversity loss, and climate change. A fascinating read for anyone interested in the role of literature in its engagement with the global eco-crises of the Anthropocene."" Ursula K. Heise, Distinguished Professor, Department of English/Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California, Los Angeles, USA “The Anthropocene is a dangerous concept: in shattering traditional conceptions of the human, it also puts familiar understandings of political agency at stake. In her wide-ranging readings of texts by authors as different as Margaret Atwood, Dionne Brand, Robinson Jeffers, and Jeff Vandermeer, Louise Economides shows how literature's engagement with deep time can energize a politics of social and ecological justice for this moment of peril. Deeply insightful and elegantly written, her book is an invaluable contribution to ongoing debates about the Anthropocene in the environmental humanities.” Hannes Bergthaller, National Taiwan Normal University ""This incisive ecocritical study explores deep time imaginaries in recent North American poetry and fiction. Economides shows how literary refractions of evolutionary and geological timescales can illuminate the stakes of political struggle and the horizons of justice in the Anthropocene."" Tobias Menely, University of California, Davis, USA “Countering ‘ecomodernist optimism’s’ obliviousness to its racist and sexist histories and to the ongoing experiences of global environmental injustice, Louise Economides’s Wild Anthropocene: Literature and Multispecies Justice in Deep Time offers readers a powerful alternative with her embrace of the strange, perhaps even partially artificial, wildness rampant in the Anthropocene. She avoids both the flat ontology attributing full agency to all forces of earthly ecologies and the corporate-friendly belief that Anthropocene engineers can control the massively shifting ecologies of Earth. Instead, the Wild Anthropocene traces literature’s contributions to shock, critique, and trace emergences of promising human and non-human networks.” Heather I. Sullivan, Professor of German and Comparative Literature, Trinity University, USA