Book contents
- Reclaiming John Steinbeck
- Reclaiming John Steinbeck
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Loving and Hating Steinbeck
- Chapter 1 Short Stories in School and Lab: “Tularecito” and “The Snake”
- Chapter 2 Drought, Climate, and Race in the West: To a God Unknown
- Chapter 3 Race and Revision: “The Vigilante” and “Johnny Bear”
- Chapter 4 Becoming Animal: Theories of Mind in The Red Pony
- Chapter 5 What Is It Like to Be a Plant? “The Chrysanthemums” and “The White Quail”
- Chapter 6 On Not Being a Modernist: Disability and Performance in Of Mice and Men
- Chapter 7 Emergence and Failure: The Middleness of The Grapes of Wrath
- Chapter 8 Borderlands: Extinction and the New World Outlook in Sea of Cortez
- Chapter 9 Mexican Revolutions: The Forgotten Village, The Pearl, and the Global South
- Epilogue The Aftertaste of Cannery Row
- Notes
- Index
Chapter 8 - Borderlands: Extinction and the New World Outlook in Sea of Cortez
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2021
- Reclaiming John Steinbeck
- Reclaiming John Steinbeck
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Loving and Hating Steinbeck
- Chapter 1 Short Stories in School and Lab: “Tularecito” and “The Snake”
- Chapter 2 Drought, Climate, and Race in the West: To a God Unknown
- Chapter 3 Race and Revision: “The Vigilante” and “Johnny Bear”
- Chapter 4 Becoming Animal: Theories of Mind in The Red Pony
- Chapter 5 What Is It Like to Be a Plant? “The Chrysanthemums” and “The White Quail”
- Chapter 6 On Not Being a Modernist: Disability and Performance in Of Mice and Men
- Chapter 7 Emergence and Failure: The Middleness of The Grapes of Wrath
- Chapter 8 Borderlands: Extinction and the New World Outlook in Sea of Cortez
- Chapter 9 Mexican Revolutions: The Forgotten Village, The Pearl, and the Global South
- Epilogue The Aftertaste of Cannery Row
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Sea of Cortez is part travelogue and part marine biology textbook that Steinbeck coauthored with his friend Ed Ricketts. This chapter examines Steinbeck’s interest in science, in species, and in the possibility of a shift in human consciousness offered by his encounter with Mexico. Placing Steinbeck’s book in the context of theories of the borderland and ideas of the Global South, together with his education in biology and “non-teleological thinking” gained from Ricketts, we uncover Steinbeck’s ecological vision that rejects progressive, goal-directed thinking. Sea of Cortez imagines an ideal of humanity, in harmony with its environment, found in moments of deep observation and passive description of other species. This descriptive method enables a complete understanding of other animals, an ecological sense of species interrelationship, and the possibility for new ways of being on the planet in the face of human extinction. The chapter ends by tracing Steinbeck’s understanding of Mexico’s indigenous population, which offers the potential of a holisitc, non-teleological existence, even as Steinbeck cannot fully transcend the barriers and prejudices of race.
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- Reclaiming John SteinbeckWriting for the Future of Humanity, pp. 147 - 167Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021