Witness to the makeshift shore: Ecological practice in A Littoral Zone

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Date

2013

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

UKZN

Abstract

This essay suggests that Douglas Livingstone's long poem 'A Littoral Zone' (1991), an explicit conversation between his work as an environmental scientist and his work as a poet, makes for a poetic statement that is, in various senses of the word, ecological. The sequence of poems draws extensively on scientific research in the field of bacteriology, is minutely located in 'place', evokes a secular sacramentalism in its representation of ecological interconnectedness, and situates the present moment in the context of deep time. In all, Livingstone's distinctive stance involves a tough, tender negotiation between irony, equanimity, wonder, and a sense of critical environmental urgency. Read twenty years later, his view of the South Coast littoral and of the world in which it is situated, seems prescient.

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Keywords

Douglas Livingstone, Eco-criticism, Secular sacramentalism, Interconnectedness, Deep time

Citation

Martin, J. (2013). Witness to the makeshift shore: Ecological practice in a Littoral Zone. Alternation: Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of the Arts and Humanities in Southern Africa, 20(6): 144-156