
Contents
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Energy Humanities and Infrastructure Studies Energy Humanities and Infrastructure Studies
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The Raw Bullion of Nature The Raw Bullion of Nature
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“The Earth Is Shaken by Our Engineries” “The Earth Is Shaken by Our Engineries”
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Build Back Better Build Back Better
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Notes Notes
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1 Emerson, Energy, Infrastructure
Get accessJeffrey Insko, Professor of English, Oakland University
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Published:18 July 2024
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Abstract
Drawing upon insights from the Energy and Environmental Humanities and infrastructure studies, this essay situates Emerson’s thought and writings in relation to the transformations of the built environment and the Earth system over the course of his career. Emerson was a keen and enthusiastic—from our view perhaps too enthusiastic—observer of these transformations. For that reason, he may seem like the wrong figure to turn to in order to help us contend with impending ecological catastrophe. Emerson perceived promise, but not failure; fruition, but not ruin; expansion, but not exhaustion; abundance, but not violence. But the aim here is not to indict Emerson. Rather, the essay argues that however much his embrace of progress and national growth may look like smokescreens for ecological exploitation and imperial expansion, he can nevertheless help us understand the roots of our own fraught relation to the energic and infrastructural systems that have made us.
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