The Urbanization And Ecological Study Of Cormac Mc Carthy

Ms. T. Jemima Asenath, Dr. A. Santhanalakshmi

Abstract


The natural environment, linguistics, and religion are all major topics in Cormac McCarthy’s books. The three concepts are compared in this paper, which contends that McCarthy gives the environmental environment a religious value that mankind may sense but just not fully comprehend or articulate. Mankind cannot accurately convey actuality via language because he is a “symbol-using” animal, according to Kenneth Burke. Communication also contributes to the privatization of the natural environment by enabling man to reassess the environment around him during light of variables that he has created. In order to expose truth outside of human language, such examples in the creatures and landscapes of the natural environment, many of McCarthy’s heroes fight against the fast urbanisation occurring in the majority of his novels. In doing so, they rediscover the fundamental truth that really is mystical, strong, and profound.


Keywords


Natural Environment, McCarthy’s History, Urbanization and Ecology

Full Text:

PDF

References


Ai-hu, C. (2013). The Humanity Exploration under the Cover of Violences: The Religious Concerns in Cormac McCarthy’s Novels. Journal of Pla University of Foreign Languages.

Kim, J. (2016). From Symptoms to Values: Aging and Old Age Represented in Cormac McCarthy’s Novels.

Ambroży, P. (2015). The Limits of Language as the Limits of the World: Cormac McCarthy’s and David Markson’s Post-Apocalyptic Novels. Text Matters, 5, 62 - 78.

Brewton, V. (2004). The Changing Landscape of Violence in Cormac McCarthy’s Early Novels and the Border Trilogy. The Southern Literary Journal, 37, 121 - 143.

Kaup, M. (2021). New Phenomenologies after Poststructuralism (Jean-Luc Marion and Alphonso Lingis) and Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. New Ecological Realisms.

Abu Jweid, A.N., & Al-HajEid, O.A. (2021). Experimental Narrative Structure and the Advent of New Humanism in Cormac McCarthy's The Road. International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation.

Cooper, L.R. (2019). Cormac McCarthy’s The Road as Apocalyptic Grail Narrative. Studies in the Novel, 43, 218 - 236.

Wildowicz, J. (2018). Discredited Female Characters, or “Gone With the Women”. A Descriptive Essay of Marginalized Femininity in Cormac McCarthy’s Selected Novels.

Raja, A., & Kaviaras, K. (2022). Affinity and complexity of biophilia in Cormac McCarthy’s Suttree. International Journal of Health Sciences.

Andersen, T.R. (2020). Back to Gondwanaland: Deep Time and Planetarity in Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow and Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 62, 97 - 111.

Bi-fan, L. (2015). Cowboy Dream Difficult to be Realized——The Sense of Cultural Loss in Cormac McCarthy's Western Novels. Journal of Tianjin Foreign Studies University.

Åström, B. (2018). Post-Feminist Fatherhood and the Marginalization of the Mother in Cormac McCarthy's The Road. Women: A Cultural Review, 29, 112 - 128.

Laug, K. (2019). Mementoes of the Broken Body : Cormac McCarthy’s Aesthetic Politics.

Wierschem, M. (2015). “Some witless paraclete beleaguered with all limbo’s Clamor”: On Violent Contagion and Apocalyptic Logic in Cormac McCarthy’s Outer Dark. Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture, 22, 185-202.

Brannon, W. (2011). Reading the World: Cormac McCarthy’s Tennessee Period (review). Studies in the Novel, 43, 122 - 124.

McLaughlin, B.E. (2015). Life vs. Unlife: Interspecies Solidarity and Companionism in Contemporary American Literature.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies
ISSN 1305-578X (Online)
Copyright © 2005-2022 by Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies