{"title":"Editor’s Note","authors":"Christina Gerhardt","doi":"10.1093/isle/isad007","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ISLE 30.1 opens with the theme of the blue humanities in the article “Noise on the Ocean Before ‘Pollution’: The Voyage of Saint Brendan” by Liam Lewis, who argues that revisiting “The Voyage of Saint Brendan, a short and popular text recounting an Irish saint’s journey across the sea to visit an earthly Paradise ( … ) from an acoustemological perspective can tell us a great deal about the history of noise on the ocean.” Graham Huggan and Pippa Marland, in “Queer Blue Sea: Sexuality and the Aquatic Uncanny in Philip Hoare’s Translantic Eco-narratives,” bring attention to Hoare’s writing in order to “argue for an expanded view of ( … ) eco-narrative—that charts its littoral and oceanic dimensions,” and “claim that Hoare articulates a vision of nature that is both queer and ecological.” Nicholas Tyler Reich’s essay, “Queer Ecology in (Gay) Post-Pastoral Cinema,” “considers how queer ecology complicates the ways in which pastoral gayness on screen imbricates in more-than-human natures and how ecological belonging manifests in a contemporary gay mise-en-scène.” What Reich aims to understand “is the extent of queer work contemporary gay pastoral cinema performs by invoking what Terry Gifford calls the ‘post-pastoral’ mode, in particular.”","PeriodicalId":43941,"journal":{"name":"ISLE-Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","volume":"6 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ISLE-Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/isle/isad007","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ISLE 30.1 opens with the theme of the blue humanities in the article “Noise on the Ocean Before ‘Pollution’: The Voyage of Saint Brendan” by Liam Lewis, who argues that revisiting “The Voyage of Saint Brendan, a short and popular text recounting an Irish saint’s journey across the sea to visit an earthly Paradise ( … ) from an acoustemological perspective can tell us a great deal about the history of noise on the ocean.” Graham Huggan and Pippa Marland, in “Queer Blue Sea: Sexuality and the Aquatic Uncanny in Philip Hoare’s Translantic Eco-narratives,” bring attention to Hoare’s writing in order to “argue for an expanded view of ( … ) eco-narrative—that charts its littoral and oceanic dimensions,” and “claim that Hoare articulates a vision of nature that is both queer and ecological.” Nicholas Tyler Reich’s essay, “Queer Ecology in (Gay) Post-Pastoral Cinema,” “considers how queer ecology complicates the ways in which pastoral gayness on screen imbricates in more-than-human natures and how ecological belonging manifests in a contemporary gay mise-en-scène.” What Reich aims to understand “is the extent of queer work contemporary gay pastoral cinema performs by invoking what Terry Gifford calls the ‘post-pastoral’ mode, in particular.”
《海岛30.1》以蓝色人文为主题开篇,作者是利亚姆·刘易斯(Liam Lewis),他在文章《污染之前的海洋噪音:圣布伦丹之旅》(the Voyage of Saint Brendan)中提出,从声学角度重新审视《圣布伦丹之旅》(《圣布伦丹之旅》)可以告诉我们很多关于海洋噪音的历史。《圣布伦丹之旅》是一篇简短而受欢迎的文章,讲述了一位爱尔兰圣徒穿越海洋前往人间天堂的旅程(……)》。Graham Huggan和Pippa Marland在《酷儿的蓝海:菲利普·霍尔大西洋生态叙事中的性与水生神秘》一书中,将人们的注意力吸引到霍尔的作品上,以“论证一种扩展的(……)生态叙事的观点——描绘出它的沿海和海洋维度”,并“声称霍尔清晰地表达了一种既酷儿又生态的自然视野”。尼古拉斯·泰勒·赖希(Nicholas Tyler Reich)的文章《(同性恋)后田园电影中的酷儿生态》(Queer Ecology in (Gay) Post-Pastoral),“思考了酷儿生态如何使田园同性恋在银幕上的表现方式复杂化,以及生态归属如何在当代同性恋场景中体现出来。”Reich想要理解的是“当代同性恋田园电影通过引用Terry Gifford所说的‘后田园’模式来表现酷儿作品的程度。”