@article{Johnson_2018, title={Perspectives of Civilization: New Beginnings After the End}, volume={5}, url={https://openjournals.bsu.edu/dlr/article/view/2693}, DOI={10.33043/DLR.5.0.17-23}, abstractNote={<p>Civilization and nature are quite intimately connected, and, as a result, a catastrophic change in the environment can produce significant alterations to both the understandings and<br>perceptions of civilization. This paper examines the views of Henry David Thoreau in an excerpt of <em>Walden</em>, William Cronon’s perceptions in “The Trouble with Wilderness; or<br>Getting Back to the Right Nature,” and James Berger’s analysis of representations of the postapocalypse in his book<em> After the End</em> to explore how they differ and align in the context of the<br>post-apocalypse</p>}, journal={Digital Literature Review}, author={Johnson, Peter Anto}, year={2018}, month={Jan.}, pages={17–23} }