Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-220) and index
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Laying the foundation for humor in nature writing -- Coyote storyteller, Simon Ortiz -- Edward Abbey: laughing out of place -- Coyote magician, Ursula Le Guin -- Louise Erdrich: seeking the best medicine -- Coyote newcomer, Sally Carrighar -- Wendell Berry: maintaining household jokes -- Coyote seer, Gary Snyder -- Rachel Carson: upholding the comedy of survival -- Making sense of humor in North America
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
"Coyote at Large shatters the misconception that nature writing - works that seem limited to expressing conventional awe, reverence, piety, and wonder - is a humorless genre. In this important and engaging study, Edward Abbey, Louise Erdrich, Wendell Berry, and Rachel Carson, whom the author dubs "comic moralists," command center stage. The trickster-coyote of Native American mythology appears in playful interludes, roaming at large through the prose and poetry of Simon Ortiz, Ursula Le Guin, Sally Carrighar, and Gary Snyder, providing a recurring analog for how comedy and humor show themselves in traditional and contemporary American nature writing."--Jacket