COCKBURN, PAUL (2026) Concrete-Jungle: Reading Nature in Representations of New York City. Doctoral thesis, Durham University.
| Full text not available from this repository. Author-imposed embargo until 12 January 2027. Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives 3.0 (CC BY-NC-ND). |
Abstract
Concrete-Jungle: Reading Nature in Representations of New York City explores evolving conceptions of nature
in representations of New York City and its "concrete jungle" mythology.
It employs a geocritical approach which privileges the spatial, rather than temporal, organisation of an
archive which spans from circa 1800 to 2025 in recognition that NYC, as both presentation and re-presentation,
is a hyperobject (massively distributed in time and space). Excavating transhistorical signs from this archive yields
novel readings of literature which productively complicate conventions of genre, discipline, and periodisation.
My first chapter performs an exegesis of the ‘concrete-jungle’, with a focus on Stephen Crane’s George’s
Mother (1896) and Tom Wolfe’s The Bonfire of the Vanities (1987); my second chapter explores the category of
‘weed’ as outlaw, excrescence, and revolutionary in the writings of Andrew Jackson Downing, Henry James, and
Edith Wharton; my third chapter tracks a tiger through the five boroughs since 1613, with a focus on Jonathan
Lethem’s Chronic City (2009); and my final chapter employs systems theory to read climate management in
representations of NYC from 1890 to 2020, with a focus on Kim Stanley Robinson’s New York 2140 (2017).
This project reveals the methods through which representation naturalises urban development and socioeconomic
organisation to thereby posit literature as a medium through which we might rethink and resist this
process. At the same time, it argues that we might reevaluate our relationship with nature (whatever it means)
even from the ruby-red steps of Manhattan’s Times Square.
| Item Type: | Thesis (Doctoral) |
|---|---|
| Award: | Doctor of Philosophy |
| Keywords: | Andrew Jackson Downing; Bruno Latour; Central Park Zoo; Cli-Fi; Climate Change; Climate Fiction; Concrete Jungle; Ecocriticism; Edith Wharton; Environmental Humanities; Financial Panic; Frank O’Hara; Geocriticism; Hugo Gernsback; Hurricane Sandy; Hyperobject; Ignatius Donnelly; Isaac Asimov; Jonathan Lethem; Kim Stanley Robinson; Literary Studies; Literature; Manhattanism; Mannahatta; Martin Heidegger; Modernism; Nativism; Naturalization; Nature; New York City; Rem Koolhaas; Stephen Crane; Tammany Hall; Tammany Tiger; Tiger; Tom Wolfe; Urban Studies; Wallace E. Howell; Walt Whitman; Weeds |
| Faculty and Department: | Faculty of Arts and Humanities > English Studies, Department of |
| Thesis Date: | 2026 |
| Copyright: | Copyright of this thesis is held by the author |
| Deposited On: | 12 Jan 2026 13:03 |



