Research Archive Citation for published version: Christopher Lloyd and Jessica Rapson, ‘Family territory’ to the ‘circumference of the earth’: local and planetary memories of climate change in Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behaviour’, Textual Practice, Vol. 31 (5): 911-931, June 2017. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2017.1323487 Document Version: This is the Accepted Manuscript version. The version in the University of Hertfordshire Research Archive may differ from the final published version. Copyright and Reuse: This Manuscript version is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ , which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Enquiries If you believe this document infringes copyright, please contact the Research & Scholarly Communications Team at
[email protected] 1 Christopher Lloyd (University of Hertfordshire) and Jessica Rapson (King’s College London) ‘Family Territory’ to the ‘Circumference of the Earth’: Local and Planetary Memories of Climate Change in Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behaviour In an article for the New Yorker, Carolyn Kormann suggests that climate change, a ‘far-reaching, fundamental transformation,’ raises ‘a full array of big, important issues for fiction to take on’.1 This article suggests that Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behaviour (2012) responds to this challenge through charting interactions between local and planetary environments, prompting readers to contextualise the micro— geographically bounded human experience and memory—within the macro context of the Anthropocene. Kingsolver’s oeuvre has consistently been attentive to the textures of ecology and place; in this novel, like her much-admired Prodigal Summer (2000), Kingsolver writes about rural Appalachia, exploring the vicissitudes of family life, environmentalism, and community.