The works of Edward Abbey have been well known to general readers since the 1960's. This volume, the first comprehensive collection of literary criticism devoted to the entire challenging corpus of Abbey's fiction and nonfiction, couldn't be more timely or significant. From the perspective of his scholarly critics in Western American literature and environmental studies Ed Abbey is, in a word, problematic. As Peter Quigley, volume editor, comments, 'The title of this collection refers to a number of references within Abbey's work. The maze is a place of myriad canyons, of wonder, and a place where the desperadoes in The Monkey Wrench Gang could lose the authorities. The coyote refers to the slippery figure in Native American myth, a figure, known to Abbey, that always eluded definition an could slip out of every trap set to catch him.' In this long-awaited anthology, eighteen intrepid scholars have chosen to ignore the coyote's reputation, tracking Abbey in one masterful and illuminating essay after another through the canyons of anarchist politics, philosophy, feminist literary criticism, post-structuralism, and rhetoric, as well as nature and environmental theory and activism.
Peter Quigley is an editor of the journal Jeffers Studies and chair of the Humanities and Social Science Department at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
Introduction: Heraclitean Fire, Bakhtinian Laughter, and the Limits of Literary Judgment ~ Peter Quigley Foreword I: The Roots of Abbey's Social Critique ~ Edward S. Twining Foreword II: Magpie ~ SueEllen Campbell \u0022I'm a humanist\u0022: The Poetic Past in Desert Solitaire ~ David J. Rothman Who Is the Lone Ranger?: Edwars Abbey as Philosopher ~ David Rothenberg Nativity, Domesticity, and Exile in Edward Abbey's \u0022One True Home\u0022 ~ Tom Lynch Rage against the Machine: Edward Abbey and Neo-Luddite Thought ~ Paul Lindholdt Edward Abbey's Inadvertent Postmodernism: Theory, Autobiography, and Politics ~ William Chaloupka Abbey as Anarchist ~ Harold Alderman \u0022Getting the Desert into a Book\u0022: Nature Writing and the Problems of Representation in a Postmodern World ~ Claire Lawrence Surviving Doom and Gloom: Edward Abbey's Desert Comedies ~ Rebecca Raglon Nietzschean Themes in the Works of Edward Abbey ~ Steve Norwick Edward Abbey's Cow ~ Barbara Barney Nelson Edward Abbey and Gender ~ Paul T. Bryant The Life of the Author: Emerson, Foucault, and the Reading of Edward Abbey's Journals ~ David Copland Morris From the Banks of the Illisus to the Arches of Utah: Edward Abbey as Noble Rhetorician ~ Bryan L. Moore Biocentrism and Green Existentialism: Edward Abbey's Conflicting Conceptualizations of Nature ~ Werner Bigell The Politics and Aesthetics of a Hopeful Anarchism: Edward Abbey's Postmodern \u0022Angelic Demonology\u0022 ~ Peter Quigley The Politics of Leisure: \u0022Industrial Tourism\u0022 in Edward Abbey's Desert Solitaire ~ Joseph A. Papa, Jr. List of Contributors Index Acknowledgments
"The first comprehensive collection of literary criticism devoted to Abbey's challenging corpus of fiction and nonfiction."--The Rough Draft "This collection...couldn't be more timely."--American Bookseller