Taking its name from the subtitle of William Least Heat-Moon's
PrairyErth (a deep map), the "deep-map" form of nonfiction and environmental writing defines an innovative and stratigraphic literary genre. Proposing that its roots can be found in Great Plains nonfiction writing, Susan Naramore Maher explores the many facets of this vital form of critique, exploration, and celebration that weaves together such elements of narrative as natural history, cultural history, geography, memoir, and intertextuality. Maher's
Deep Map Country gives readers the first book-length study of the deep-map nonfiction of the Great Plains region, featuring writers as diverse as Julene Bair, Sharon Butala, Loren Eiseley, Don Gayton, Linda Hasselstrom, William Least Heat-Moon, John Janovy Jr., John McPhee, Kathleen Norris, and Wallace Stegner.
Deep Map Country examines the many layers of storytelling woven into their essays: the deep time of geology and evolutionary biology; the cultural history of indigenous and settlement communities; the personal stories of encounters with this expansive terrain; the political and industrial stories that have affected the original biome and Plains economies; and the spiritual dimensions of the physical environment that press on everyday realities.
Author: Susan Naramore Maher
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Published: 05/01/2014
Pages: 256
Weight: 1lbs
Size: 8.60h x 5.70w x 1.00d
ISBN: 9780803245020
About the AuthorSusan Naramore Maher is dean of the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Minnesota, Duluth. She is coeditor of
Artifacts and Illuminations: Critical Essays on Loren Eiseley (Nebraska, 2012) and
Coming into McPhee Country: John McPhee and the Art of Literary Nonfiction.