RT info:eu-repo/semantics/article T1 Measured chaos: EcoPoet(h)ics of the wild in Barbara Kingsolver’s Prodigal Summer T2 Caos medido: EcoPoética de lo salvaje en Prodigal Summer de Barbara Kingsolver A1 Meillon, Bénédicte K1 Ecopoet(h)ics K1 Ecofeminism K1 Wildness K1 Enchantment K1 Multispecies entanglements K1 Chaos theory K1 Ecopoética K1 Ecofeminismo K1 Naturaleza salvaje K1 Encantamiento K1 Entrelazamientos multiespecie K1 Teoría del caos K1 Literatura K1 Literature K1 Medio ambiente K1 Environmental science AB Ecopoetics forms a human expression of the naturecultures that sustain us, enfolding us within an earth that is much more than a mere environment. In consequence, the ecopoet serves as a mediator between the multitudinous voices and lifeforms that take part in the song of the world. Weaving its way into the matter and texts of the world, human language—I argue in the wake of new materialism— provides the measure of and seeks inspiration in the apparent randomness and underlying design motivating the evolution of complex systems in the universe. I interweave approaches originating in Anglophone ecocriticism and ecophilosophy with ecopoetics—as Jonathan Bate and Scott Knickerbocker have defined it—with its close attention paid to the complex, interlaced fabric of the text. Barbara Kingsolver’s ecopoet(h)ics draws from chaos theory, inviting readers to shift interpretative paradigms, moving away from linear, binary grids of logic and reading, toward integrating complex, overlapping systems of meaning. Focusing on Kingsolver’s novel Prodigal Summer (2000), this paper argues that, as Snyder once put it, art is not so much “an imposition of order on chaotic nature, freedom, and chaos;” rather it is “a matter of discovering the grain of things, of uncovering the measured chaos that structures the natural world,” of revealing “the way [wild] phenomena actualize themselves,” including within a wild ecopoetic language. PB Universidad de Alcalá SN 2171-9594 YR 2019 FD 2019 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10017/37754 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10017/37754 LA eng DS MINDS@UW RD 20-abr-2024