ISSN 1226-8682

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Pages : 121

DOI :

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Abstract

Han, Mi-Young. ¡°Reading the Ecopoems of Mary Oliver and Gary Snyder with Deleuze.¡± Studies in English Language & Literature 47.3 (2021): 121-145. This study examines the ecopoems of Mary Oiver and Gary Snyder, utilizing Gilles Deleuze¡¯s conceptualization of rhizome, becoming and body without organs. Oliver thinks that every life is connected to each other and human beings are a part of nature. She shares Deleuze¡¯s concepts of rhizome and becoming. Rhizome system is that any point can be connected to any other point. She also explores the possibility of becoming-others. Especially, becoming-animal brings the human outside from his or her narrow anthropocentric confines, allowing him or her to reach the nonhuman. Snyder tells us a lot about Buddhism and its practice in his poems. He thinks the relationship of humans and nonhumans is interdependent and cannot be separated, which has similarities to the Buddist¡¯s interconnectness and respect for life. The concepts of connection and arrangement of Deleuze are connected to sunyata in Buddhism. The sunyata in Buddhist concept means that no individual person or thing has fixed identity and everything does not exist independently. This thought is similar to the body without organs of Deleuze¡¯s theory. The body without organs holds a suggestion that one can avoid a fixed identity and perceive animality as a mode that makes becomings possible. These theories of Deleuze have many similar points and share the thoughts of Snyder. (Kyungsang National University)

Keywords

# Deleuze # rhizome # becoming # body without organs # Buddhism

References