Geopoetics: On organising, mourning, and the incalculable. Engelmann, S. Dialogues in Human Geography, 11(1):31–35, March, 2021.
Paper doi abstract bibtex In this commentary, I trace some of the earthy, mineral, and more-than-human properties of Magrane’s climate poems in order to emphasise the urgency of the geopoetics project. In particular, I consider Magrane’s use of constraint, de/composition, and juxtaposition as geopoetic techniques. In addition to challenging abstractions of climate change and enlivening critical and creative approaches for geography and the geohumanities, I propose that geopoetics may cultivate humility and participate in gestures of mourning. In closing, I suggest further questions for the grammar of geopoetics and geography in the midst of the current intersecting ecological, medical, economic and social crises.
@article{engelmann_geopoetics_2021,
title = {Geopoetics: {On} organising, mourning, and the incalculable},
volume = {11},
issn = {2043-8206},
shorttitle = {Geopoetics},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820620986398},
doi = {10.1177/2043820620986398},
abstract = {In this commentary, I trace some of the earthy, mineral, and more-than-human properties of Magrane’s climate poems in order to emphasise the urgency of the geopoetics project. In particular, I consider Magrane’s use of constraint, de/composition, and juxtaposition as geopoetic techniques. In addition to challenging abstractions of climate change and enlivening critical and creative approaches for geography and the geohumanities, I propose that geopoetics may cultivate humility and participate in gestures of mourning. In closing, I suggest further questions for the grammar of geopoetics and geography in the midst of the current intersecting ecological, medical, economic and social crises.},
language = {en},
number = {1},
urldate = {2021-11-03},
journal = {Dialogues in Human Geography},
author = {Engelmann, Sasha},
month = mar,
year = {2021},
keywords = {earth, energy, geography, geopoetics, language, materiality, notion},
pages = {31--35},
}
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