Theorising the Postcolonial Eco-Novel Unsettlement and the Nonhuman in Australian Ecofiction [#1021626]

Theorising the Postcolonial Eco-Novel: Unsettlement and the Nonhuman in Australian Ecofiction (Literatures, Cultures, and the Environment) by Rachel Fetherston
English | November 16, 2025 | ISBN: 3032044650 | 240 pages | PDF, EPUB | 3.50 Mb
This book explores how contemporary Australian ecofiction interrogates and challenges settler-colonial conceptions of nature and the nonhuman through a close-reading of nine Australian eco-novels. Fetherston's reading reveals the representation of the nonhuman in different contexts and the ability of fiction to destabilise settler claims on Australian land and the nonhuman. Texts covered include a combination of texts by First Nations authors, non-Indigenous Anglo-Celtic Australian authors writing within a settler-colonial literary tradition, and non-Indigenous Australian authors whose novels reflect diasporic literary practices. Fetherston argues that Australian ecofiction authors have established over the last decade a postcolonising eco-literary framework that connects the concepts of nonhuman agency and more-than human relationality with the notion of unsettlement, or unsettled belonging, in the context of the climate crisis.
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