Climate geopoetics (the earth is a composted poem). Magrane, E. Dialogues in Human Geography, 11(1):8–22, March, 2021.
Climate geopoetics (the earth is a composted poem) [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
This article begins with a climate poem and ends with a climate poem. In between, I explore what it means to do climate geopoetics. The first section addresses recent literary work that engages with climate change and the Anthropocene and outlines the geopoetic field as it is currently emerging as a subfield of the geohumanities. Next, I turn to examining climate narratives and frames; following the lead of many human geographers and environmental humanities scholars, I approach climate change as a social and cultural issue. I then discuss the methodology of this particular climate geopoetics project, commenting on and contextualizing some of my writing and thinking process for the climate poems that are woven throughout the article. By centering this article around three poems, I explore what it means to do climate geopoetics, the curious nature of the Anthropocene/Anthroposcene as a concept that both centers and de-centers the human, and the tensions on textual form that geopoetic practices create. It is my hope that this project may offer a fresh and unconventional approach to examining the multiple ways that climate change is framed, engaged, and contested.
@article{magrane_climate_2021,
	title = {Climate geopoetics (the earth is a composted poem)},
	volume = {11},
	issn = {2043-8206},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820620908390},
	doi = {10.1177/2043820620908390},
	abstract = {This article begins with a climate poem and ends with a climate poem. In between, I explore what it means to do climate geopoetics. The first section addresses recent literary work that engages with climate change and the Anthropocene and outlines the geopoetic field as it is currently emerging as a subfield of the geohumanities. Next, I turn to examining climate narratives and frames; following the lead of many human geographers and environmental humanities scholars, I approach climate change as a social and cultural issue. I then discuss the methodology of this particular climate geopoetics project, commenting on and contextualizing some of my writing and thinking process for the climate poems that are woven throughout the article. By centering this article around three poems, I explore what it means to do climate geopoetics, the curious nature of the Anthropocene/Anthroposcene as a concept that both centers and de-centers the human, and the tensions on textual form that geopoetic practices create. It is my hope that this project may offer a fresh and unconventional approach to examining the multiple ways that climate change is framed, engaged, and contested.},
	language = {en},
	number = {1},
	urldate = {2021-11-03},
	journal = {Dialogues in Human Geography},
	author = {Magrane, Eric},
	month = mar,
	year = {2021},
	keywords = {Anthropocene poetics, Anthroposcene, climate change poetry, climate narratives, geohumanities, geopoetics, notion},
	pages = {8--22},
}

Downloads: 0