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Literary innovation and geographical expansion often depend on mass extinction of literary forms. Ecological catastrophe strikes as cross-regional climate change, epidemic, or geological disaster. Sometimes aided by prior globalizing steps but always intertwined with social and cultural forces, it curtails population, globalization, literacy, and literature; delegitimates the old order; and undermines dominant literary modes. But when ecological conditions are again favorable, previously marginal literary forms come to prominence, a new cultural age emerges, and literary globalization advances. Literary history is shaped by this recurrent alternation. From 3300 BCE to 400 CE, climate change—aridity and global cooling—is the dominant ecological shock. From 150 to 1560 CE, these disruptive forces, together with volcanic eruptions, often set the stage for a hitherto unknown scourge, a new key driver made possible by increasing globalization—the pandemic. Beginning in the late 16th century, however, pandemics relatively recede. Climate change again dominates, first as global cooling, now as global heating. Throughout, ecological catastrophe is arguably the central force of creative destruction—temporarily undermining literature and literary globalization, ultimately enabling literary innovation and diffusion.
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