O u t b a c ka n dO u tW e s t Outback he Settler-Colonial and Environmental Imaginary Out West T o mLy n c h University of Nebraska PressLincoln © 2022 by the Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska Portions of this text irst appeared as “Ecopastoralism: SettlerColonial Reinhabitation Narratives in the US West and Australian Outback,”Australian Literary Studies30, no. 2 (2015): 103–12; “‘Nothing but Land’: Women’s Narratives, Gardens, and the SettlerColonial Imaginary in the US West and Australian Outback,”Western American Literature48, no. 4 (2014): 375–99; “Strange Lands: he Lexicon of Settler-Colonial Landscapes in Charles Fletcher Lummis’s and Arthur Groom’s Portrayals of the American West and the Australian Outback,”ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment22, no. 4 (2015): 1–20; and “Eco-memoir, Belonging, and the Settler-Colonial Poetics of Place Identity in Jerry Wilson’s Waiting for Coyote’s Call: An Eco-Memoir rom the Missouri River Bluf,” inDwellings of Enchantment: Writing and Reenchanting the Earth, ed. Bénédicte Meillon (Lanham md: Lexington, 2020), 119–30. All rights reserved he University of Nebraska Press is part of a land-grant institution with campuses and programs on the past, present, and future homelands of the Pawnee, Ponca, Otoe-Missouria, Omaha, Dakota, Lakota, Kaw, Cheyenne, and Arapaho Peoples, as well as those of the relocated Ho-Chunk, Sac and Fox, and Iowa Peoples.
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