2022
DOI: 10.3138/ycl-64-060
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Ruin Gazing: Robert Frost and the Afterlives of Settler Environmentalism

Abstract: This article considers a paradox that structures the internal logic of the ideology of improvement, a central justification for settler colonialism’s strategies of cultural and material dispossession. Far from establishing a limit to settler colonialism as predicted by the writings of John Locke, scenes of ruined, abandoned land are seen to extend settler sovereignty. Specifically, the article examines settler representations of, and encounters with, ruin in the poetry of Robert Frost to argue that irony’s “in… Show more

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