ABSTRACT
This edited collection, which is situated within the environmental humanities and environmental social sciences, brings together utopian and dystopian representations of pandemics from across literature, the arts, and social movements.
Featuring analyses of literary works, TV and film, theater, politics, and activism, the chapters in this volume home in on critical topics such as posthumanism, multispecies futures, agency, political ecology, environmental justice, and Indigenous and settler-colonial environmental relations. The book asks: how do pandemics and ecological breakdown show us the ways that humans are deeply interconnected with the more-than-human world? And what might we learn from exploring those entanglements, both within creative works and in lived reality? Brazilian, Indian, Polish, and Dutch texts feature alongside classic literary works like Defoe’s A Journal of a Plague Year (1722) and Matheson’s I Am Legend (1954), as well as broader takes on movements like global youth climate activism. These investigations are united by their thematic interests in the future of human and nonhuman relationships in the shadow of climate emergency and increasing pandemic risk, as well as in the glimmers of utopian hope they exhibit for the creation of more just futures.
This exploration of how pandemics illuminate the entangled materialities and shared vulnerabilities of all living things is an engaging and timely analysis that will appeal to environmentally minded researchers, academics, and students across various disciplines within the humanities and social sciences.
The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part 1|40 pages
Monsters and Monstrosity
chapter 1|12 pages
“In the woods the Tox is still wild”
chapter 2|13 pages
The Human/Un(human)
chapter 3|13 pages
A Scourge Even Worse Than Disease
part 2|50 pages
Intersectional Critique
chapter 4|12 pages
Fungal Imaginaries
chapter 5|13 pages
Five Hundred Years of Plague
chapter 6|13 pages
Corruption and Cleansing
chapter 7|10 pages
Through Currents of Contamination
part 3|58 pages
More-Than-Human Mutual Aid and Eco-Justice
chapter 8|14 pages
Dystopian Prohibitions and Utopian Possibilities in Edmonton, Canada, at the Onset of the COVID-19 Pandemic
chapter 10|15 pages
“A vortex of summons and repulsion”
part 4|54 pages
Creative Resistance and Utopian Glimmers
