Abstract
Crypsis in the Time of Climate Change
The lyrical novella The Blue Fox (2004), by the Icelandic writer Sjón, begins with its third-person narrator noting the uncanny ability of blue foxes (a variety of arctic foxes with dark blue, brown, or gray coats) to avoid detection in the winter by blending in with their surroundings. “Blue foxes are so curiously like stones that it is a matter for wonder,” the narrator muses. “When they lie beside them in winter there is no hope of telling them apart from the rocks themselves; indeed, they’re far trickier than white foxes, which always cast a shadow or look yellow against the snow” (3)...
The lyrical novella The Blue Fox (2004), by the Icelandic writer Sjón, begins with its third-person narrator noting the uncanny ability of blue foxes (a variety of arctic foxes with dark blue, brown, or gray coats) to avoid detection in the winter by blending in with their surroundings. “Blue foxes are so curiously like stones that it is a matter for wonder,” the narrator muses. “When they lie beside them in winter there is no hope of telling them apart from the rocks themselves; indeed, they’re far trickier than white foxes, which always cast a shadow or look yellow against the snow” (3)...
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 465-499 |
| Number of pages | 35 |
| Journal | Contemporary Literature |
| Volume | 63 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 29 Jan 2024 |
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