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<title><string language="fre"><![CDATA[Always Becoming Bioregional / Tom Lynch]]></string></title>
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<string language="fre"><![CDATA[Always Becoming Bioregional / Tom Lynch, in symposium international "Regional Becomings in North America" organisé, sous la responsabilité scientifique de Wendy Harding (Cultures Anglo-Saxonnes (CAS), Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, France) et de Nancy Cook (University of Montana, USA), Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, 7-8 avril 2016. 
Session 1: Bioregional Becomings I.
Using
the American West as the primary example, Tom Lynch offers bioregionalism as an
alternative to traditional regional formations. By foregrounding the
characteristics of the natural world as part of personal and place-based
identity, bioregionalism necessarily links identity with environmental concerns
helping to generate an ecologically aware consciousness. 
Bioregionalism
also helps us to avoid many of the unproductive dichotomies that bedevil
place-oriented thinking. It links city and country, wilderness and heavily
utilized landscapes, within the context of an encompassing bioregion or
watershed. It mitigates us-them polarities of insider-outsider, since humans
are primarily understood not as various cultures, nationalities, ethnicities,
races, migrants, etc., some of which do and some of which do not belong in a
particular place. Instead, it understands humans primarily as one among many
animal species seeking to inhabit a territory and is suspicious of political
borders. Bioregional borders are necessarily contingent, permeable, and
shifting. Bioregions are understood as nested and interconnected, subsuming
local vs. global or "roots" vs. "routes" binaries. 
The
paper concludes by arguing that bioregionalism is a process-oriented sense of
place, acknowledging systems and connections both within and beyond the local.
Bioregional identity is a practice: it is something one does, not something one
is. One is always becoming a bioregional inhabitant.]]></string></description>
<keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[régionalisme (littérature)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[littérature américaine (20e-21e siècles)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[nature (dans la littérature)]]></string></keyword>
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NOTE: Tom Lynch is an English professor at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, where he teaches ecocriticism and place-oriented literatures. He is editor of the journal Western American Literature, author of Xerophilia: Ecocritical Explorations in Southwestern Literature, and co-editor of several volumes, including The Bioregional Imagination: Literature, Ecology, and Place and Artifacts and Illuminations: Critical Essays on Loren Eiseley. > Voir sa page personnelle (UNL). 
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