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Re: evolution and nature writing



For Thomas Lynch: You could try?"From So Simple a Beginning: Evolutionary Origins of US Nature Writing," because it discusses works by such writers as Leopold, Lopez, and Quammen, while placing these works within a more historical thread of evolutionary ideas--ISLE 10.1 by Jean Arnold??



-----Original Message-----
From: Thomas P Lynch <tlynch2@unlnotes.unl.edu>
To: asle@interversity.org
Sent: Wed, 3 Sep 2008 11:10 am
Subject: [asle] evolution and nature writing





Hi all,
I've just been assigned to teach a class next spring on Darwin and American
nature writing. Next year there's a big Darwin hoopla scheduled here, run
mostly by the biology dept., but we in English are doing our part. The
idea is to read American nature writers who deal with or who have been
obviously influenced by Darwin and evolutionary theory. Some present
suspects I have in mind would be Loren Eiseley, David Quammen (who's coming
to campus), E. O. Wilson, maybe Ursula Goodenough. But I'm looking for
some other suggestions from this list's vast storehouse of knowledge.
Maybe some poets? Maybe a novel?

Thanks, Tom

--------------------------------------
Tom Lynch
Associate Professor
Department of English
202 Andrews Hall
P.O. Box 880333
University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Lincoln, NE 68588-0333
(402) 472-1833
http://english.unl.edu/faculty/profs/tlynch.html
http://www.unl.edu/tlynch2/Homepage.htm

El Lobo: Readings on the Mexican Gray Wolf:
http://www.uofupress.com/store/product295.html
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