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  • Fire Was in the Reptile’s Mouth: Towards a Transcultural Ecological Poetics

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    Author(s)
    Cooke, Stuart
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Cooke, Stuart S.
    Year published
    2016
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    Abstract
    This paper compares two creation narratives from indigenous peoples on either side of the Pacific Ocean, the relationships between which catalyse the theorisation of a transcultural approach to ecological poetics. The comparison of these narratives reveals important, rhizomatic similarities, and also unmistakable regional differences, concerning the origins of language and culture in Yanomami (Venezuela) and MakMak (Australia) communities. Concomitant with the centrality of indigenous thought in this theorisation of ecopoetics is the de­centrality of human-only conceptions of poetics. Accordingly, the paper considers ...
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    This paper compares two creation narratives from indigenous peoples on either side of the Pacific Ocean, the relationships between which catalyse the theorisation of a transcultural approach to ecological poetics. The comparison of these narratives reveals important, rhizomatic similarities, and also unmistakable regional differences, concerning the origins of language and culture in Yanomami (Venezuela) and MakMak (Australia) communities. Concomitant with the centrality of indigenous thought in this theorisation of ecopoetics is the de­centrality of human-only conceptions of poetics. Accordingly, the paper considers non-semantic forms of poetics such as birdsong in order to de-centre classically Western, humanist conceptions of language and ecology.
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    Journal Title
    Landscapes: the Journal of the International Centre for Landscape and Language
    Volume
    7
    Issue
    1
    Publisher URI
    https://ro.ecu.edu.au/landscapes/vol7/iss1/17/
    Subject
    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cultural Studies
    Literary Theory
    Environmental Philosophy
    Urban and Regional Planning
    Policy and Administration
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/99315
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    • Journal articles

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