1st Edition

Humanities for the Environment Integrating knowledge, forging new constellations of practice

Edited By Joni Adamson, Michael Davis Copyright 2017
    262 Pages 28 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    276 Pages 28 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Humanities for the Environment, or HfE, is an ambitious project that from 2013-2015 was funded by a generous grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The project networked universities and researchers internationally through a system of 'observatories'. This book collects the work of contributors networked through the North American, Asia-Pacific, and Australia-Pacific observatories.

    Humanities for the Environment showcases how humanists are working to 'integrate knowledges' from diverse cultures and ontologies and pilot new 'constellations of practice' that are moving beyond traditional contemplative or reflective outcomes (the book, the essay) towards solutions to the greatest social and environmental challenges of our time. With the still controversial concept of the 'Anthropocene' as a starting point for a widening conversation, contributors range across geographies, ecosystems, climates and weather regimes; moving from icy, melting Arctic landscapes to the bleaching Australian Great Barrier Reef, and from an urban pedagogical 'laboratory' in Phoenix, Arizona to Vatican City in Rome. Chapters explore the ways in which humanists, in collaboration with communities and disciplines across academia, are responding to warming oceans, disappearing islands, collapsing fisheries, evaporating reservoirs of water, exploding bushfires, and spreading radioactive contamination.

    This interdisciplinary work will be of great interest to scholars in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences interested in interdisciplinary questions of environment and culture.

     

    1. Introduction: "Integrating Knowledge, Forging New Constellations of Practice in the Environmental Humanities" Joni Adamson

    Section I: Integrating Knowledge, Extending the Conversation

    2. "Backbone: Holding Up Our Future" Linda Hogan (Chicaza)

    3. "Country and the Gift" Deborah Bird Rose

    4. "Introduction: Backbone and Country" Michael Davis

    Section II: Backbone

    5. "Twilight Islands and Environmental Crises: Re-writing a History of the Caribbean and Pacific Regions through the Islands Existing in their Shadows" Karen N. Salt

    6. "Seaweed, Soul-ar Panels and Other Entanglements" Giovanna Di Chiro

    7. "Is it Colonial Déjà Vu? Indigenous Peoples and Climate Injustice" Kyle Powys Whyte

    8. "Gathering the Desert in an Urban Lab: Designing the Citizen Humanities" Joni Adamson

    9. "Environmental Rephotography: Visually Mapping Time, Change and Experience" Mark Klett and Tyrone Martinsson

    10. "Integral Ecology in the Pope’s Environmental Encyclical, Implications for Environmental Humanities" Michael E. Zimmerman 

    Section III: Country

    11. "Radiation Ecologies, Resistance, and Survivance on Pacific Islands: Albert Wendt’s Black Rainbow and Syaman Rapongan’s Drifting Dreams and the Ocean" Hsinya Huang and Syaman Rapongan

    12. "Walking Together into Knowledge: Aboriginal/European Collaborative Environmental Encounters in Australia’s North-East, 1847-1850" Michael Davis

    13. "‘The Lifting of the Sky’: Outside the Anthropocene" Tony Birch

    14. "Literature, Ethics, and Bushfire in the Anthropocene" Kate Rigby

    15. "Placing the Nation: Curating Landmarks at the National Museum of Australia" Kirsten Wehner

    16. "The Oceanic Turn: Submarine Futures of the Anthropocene" Elizabeth DeLoughrey

    Biography

    Joni Adamson is Professor of Environmental Humanities in the Department of English, and Director of the Environmental Humanities Initiative at the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability at Arizona State University, USA.

    Michael Davis is an Honorary Research Fellow with the Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney, Australia, and a Member of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies.

    Humanities for the Environment presents the work of researchers, drawn from the global HfE Observatories network, challenging the parameters of research in the traditional humanities with a view to developing more engaged, more effectively communicative modes of scholarship in response to the overwhelming environmental tumult and tragedies of our time. These are thinkers – some Indigenous, many involved in Indigenous collaborations - working at the limits of imagination and passion in an effort to bring modern civilization back from its blind brink to some semblance of ecological maturity, morality and sanity.
    Freya Matthews, Latrobe University, AU

     

    Humanities for the Environment (HfE): Integrating Knowledge, Forging New Constellations of Practice is a vital, necessary, project-building collection enacting the transdisciplinary relevance of the humanities to environmental knowledge and ecological crisis. It is humanist in the deepest planetary and historicist ways, burrowing into multi-sited tactics, indigenous resources, worlding literatures, and networked practices that command imagination and solicit action under the horizon of the Anthropocene as a time when ‘science’ as such needs to come to terms with dangers, risks, hopes, and damages of being human. 
    Rob Wilson, University of California at Santa Cruz, USA

     

    Drawing upon indigenous cosmologies, environmental pedagogy and grassroots activism, Humanities for the Environment, admirably decolonizes the fraught term, Anthropocene, and compassionately advocates with engaging and critical yet deeply felt narratives for ‘new constellations’, or gatherings of lifeways, practices, and disciplines.  The aim is to put 'this world back together' for all living beings. We would do well to heed this clarion chorus.
    Subhankar Banerjee, Lannan Chair and Professor of Art & Ecology, University of New Mexico, USA