Associate Professor Drew Hubbell, Susquehanna University, PA USA Adjunct Professor, UWA, WA, AU

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Associate Professor Drew Hubbell, Susquehanna University, PA USA Adjunct Professor, UWA, WA, AU Andrew.hubbell@uwa.edu.au

The literature of the Romantic period, commonly seen as crucially about nature, [ ] still influences the ways in which the ecological imaginary works. Timothy Morton, (2007) Ecology without Nature, 1.

Information Environment #1: author centered Individual actions initiated by individual (human) agents language is mimetic, a transparent representation of the world Ideas belong to the language user

Information Environment #2: Action centered Actions are effects produced within networks of interconnected entities, human or nonhuman Language performs meaningfully within material-semiotic relationships Ideas are accretions of other ideas

Information Environment #1: author centered Individual actions initiated by individual (human) agents language is mimetic, a transparent representation of the world Ideas belong to the language user

Information Environment #2: Action centered Actions are effects produced within networks of interconnected entities, human or nonhuman Language performs meaningfully within material-semiotic relationships Ideas are accretions of other ideas

Information Environment #1: author centered Individual actions initiated by individual (human) agents language is mimetic, a transparent representation of the world Ideas belong to the language user

Intellectual Property Rights requires this kind of environment: a separation between things and persons turns out to be a necessary precondition [ ] What is attributed to the thing in question (design, invention, resource) will be used to drive divisions between people (authors or resource holders against the rest of the world). For while an author may claim copyright in a work, the work itself must show, in its makeup, that it has been authored. Marilyn Strathern, (1999) What is Intellectual Property After? 170.

Information Environment #2: Action centered Actions are effects produced within networks of interconnected entities, human or nonhuman Language performs meaningfully within material-semiotic relationships Ideas are accretions of other ideas

The environment is not located somewhere out there, but is always the very substance of ourselves. Stacy Alaimo, (2010) Bodily Natures, 4.

This posthumanist definition of ecological identity refuses to delineate the human, the cultural, or the linguistic against a background of mute matter. Nature, culture, bodies, texts all unravel into a limitless force field of differentiation. Stacy Alaimo, (2010) Bodily Nature, 4 and 14.

There has been much effort to understand how it is that durability is achieved. How it is that things get performed (and perform themselves) into relations that are relatively stable and stay in place. [ ] Performativity which (sometimes) makes durability and fixity. John Law, After ANT: Complexity, Naming, Topology, 4

Conceptions of politics and conceptions of nature have always formed a pair as firmly united as the two seats on a seesaw [...] There has never been any other politics than the politics of nature, and there has never been any other nature than the nature of politics. Epistemology and politics, as we now understand very well, are one and the same thing, conjoined in (political) epistemology. Bruno Latour, (2004) Politics of Nature, 28.

The politics runs deep, right into the heart of the grammar. Angus Fletcher, (2004) A New Theory for American Poetry, 107. This I am calling the environment poem, a genre where the poet neither writes about the surrounding world, thematizing it, nor analytically represents that world, but actually shapes the poem to be an Emersonian or emplastic circle. Angus Fletcher, (2004) A New Theory for American Poetry, 9.

Therefore, to use the topos (place in rhetoric) figuratively for the topos (place in nature) is to want the mirror to reflect itself. Angus Fletcher, (2004) A New Theory for American Poetry, 54.

Nature, achieved obliquely through turning metonymy into metaphor, becomes an oblique way of talking about politics. Timothy Morton, (2007) Ecology without Nature, 14-16. The troping of form translates into a larger reshaping of our ideas of representation, since politics is itself a figural game whose paradigms are simply very large scale metaphors. Angus Fletcher, (2004) A New Theory for American Poetry, 149.

So shalt thou see and hear The lovely shapes and sounds intelligible Of that eternal language, which thy God U<ers, who from eternity doth teach Himself in all things, and all things in Himself. Great Universal Teacher! He shall mould Thy spirit, and by giving make it ask. S. T. Coleridge, (1798) Frost at Midnight, 58-65

Joy, Lady! is the spirit and the power, Which wedding Nature to us gives in dower, A new Earth and a new Heaven. ( Dejection: An Ode [1802] 67-69) Joy is the sweet voice, Joy the luminous cloud We in ourselves rejoice! And thence flows all that charms or ear or sight, All melodies the echoes of that voice, All colours a suffusion of that light. (71-75) I may not hope from outward forms to win The passion and the life, whose fountains are within. (45-46)

Joy lift her spirit, joy attune her voice; To her may all things live, from pole to pole, Their life the eddying of her living soul! O simple spirit, guided from above, Dear Lady! Friend devoutest of my choice, Thus mayest thou ever, evermore rejoice. ( Dejection: an Ode [1802] 134-139)

I write what is uppermost without delay I ne er decide what I shall say, and this I call Much too poetical. Men should know why They write, and for what end; but, note or text, I never know the word which will come next. (Don Juan [1819-1824] IX.325-328) Some have accused me of a strange design Against the creed and morals of the land, And trace it in this poem every line: I don t pretend that I quite understand My own meaning when I would be very fine; But the fact is that I have nothing plann d, Unless it were to be a moment merry, A novel word in my vocabulary. (DJ.III.32-40)

What a sublime discovery twas to make the Universe universal Egotism! That all s ideal all ourselves: I ll stake the World (be it what you will) that that s no Schism. Oh, Doubt! if thou be Doubt, for which some take thee For ever and anon comes Indigestion, (Not the most dainty Ariel ) and perplexes Our soarings with another sort of question: And that which after all my spirit vexes, Is, that I can find no spot where man can rest eye on, Without confusion of the sorts and sexes, Of being, stars, and this unriddled wonder, The World, which at the worst s a sort of glorious blunder (Don Juan [1819-1824] XI.9-13, 17-24)