ABSTRACT

International in scope, this volume brings together leading and emerging voices working at the intersection of contemporary art, visual culture, activism, and climate change, and addresses key questions, such as: why and how do art and visual culture, and their ethics and values, matter with regard to a world increasingly shaped by climate breakdown?

Foregrounding a decolonial and climate-justice-based approach, this book joins efforts within the environmental humanities in seeking to widen considerations of climate change as it intersects with social, political, and cultural realms. It simultaneously expands the nascent branches of ecocritical art history and visual culture, and builds toward the advancement of a robust and critical interdisciplinarity appropriate to the complex entanglements of climate change.

This book will be of special interest to scholars and practitioners of contemporary art and visual culture, environmental studies, cultural geography, and political ecology.

part I|64 pages

Extractivism

chapter 1|11 pages

Extracting the Cost

Re-membering the Discarded in African Landscapes

chapter 2|9 pages

In the Frontiers of Amazonia

A Brief Political Archaeology of Global Climate Emergency

chapter 3|10 pages

From Tuíra to the Amazon fires

The Imagery and Imaginary of Extractivism in Brazil

chapter 4|9 pages

Describing the Indescribable

Art and the Climate Crisis 1

chapter 6|11 pages

Road to Injustice

Ecological Impunity and Resistance in West Papua

part II|74 pages

Climate Violence

chapter 8|12 pages

The Coming War and the Impossible Art

Zapatista Creativity in a Context of Environmental Destruction and Internal Warfare

chapter 9|8 pages

View from the Terracene

chapter 10|11 pages

Waste You Can’t Deny

A Slow Trans-aesthetic in The Blue Barrel Grove

chapter 11|10 pages

The Perpetual Present, Past, and Future

Slow Violence and Chinese Frameworks of In/Visibility and Time in Zhao Liang’s Behemoth

chapter 12|10 pages

Remembering the Land

Art, Direct Action, and the Denial of Extractive Realities on Bougainville

chapter 13|10 pages

Multispecies Cinema in Wretched Waters

The Slow Violence of the Rio Doce Disaster

part III|65 pages

Sensing Climates

chapter 17|12 pages

Indigenous Media

Dialogic Resistance to Climate Disruption

chapter 18|10 pages

At Memory’s Edge

Climate Trauma in the Arctic through Film

chapter 19|10 pages

The Breathing Land

On Questions of Climate Change and Settler Colonialism

part IV|80 pages

In/Visibilities

chapter 21|12 pages

Visualizing Atmospheric Politics

chapter 23|11 pages

Ways of Saying

Rhetorical Strategies of Environmentalist Imaging

chapter 25|9 pages

Inside Out

Creative Response Beyond Periphery and Peril

chapter 26|12 pages

Capturing Nature

Eco-Justice in African Art

part V|89 pages

Multispecies Justice

chapter 28|11 pages

“With Applied Creativity, We Can Heal”

Permaculture and Indigenous Futurism at Santa Clara Pueblo - Rose B. Simpson in Conversation with Jessica L. Horton

chapter 29|10 pages

Decolonizing the Seed Commons

Biocapitalism, Agroecology, and Visual Culture

chapter 30|10 pages

The Politics and Ecology of Invasive Species

A Changing Climate for Pioneering Plants

chapter 31|11 pages

Multispecies Futures through Art

chapter 32|12 pages

Activist Abstraction

Anita Krajnc, Save Movement Photography, and the Climate of Industrial Meat

chapter 33|11 pages

Alien Waters

chapter 34|8 pages

Everything is Alive

Jason deCaires Taylor’s Vicissitudes

part VI|63 pages

Ruptures/Insurgencies/Worldings

chapter 35|10 pages

The Work of Life in the Age of Extinction

Notes Towards an Art of Aliveness

chapter 37|9 pages

From Institutional to Interstitial Critique

The Resistant Force that is Liberating the Neoliberal Museum from Below

chapter 39|9 pages

Our House Is on Fire

Children, Youth, and the Visual Politics of Climate Change