ABSTRACT

The Afterword of the Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity forefronts the creative theoretical and conceptual contributions of the volume to international transdisciplinary ecocultural scholarship and the importance of developing a shared language of ecologically and socially responsive research. The editors outline the Handbook’s limits, and frame the collection as an invitation to begin ecocultural inquiry from the experience of identity and as an enticement to rethink and intervene in the selfhood underpinnings of perceptions and practices that profoundly impact each other and the wider biosphere.