ABSTRACT
This intermezzo connects with the materiality of ice volcanoes, ice explosion, and ice caves, allowing for geosocial formations that consider how these place-spaces can reimagine earthworm subjectivities as a mode of thinking otherwise. Volcanoes are complex systems that evolve in space and time as a result of their internal dynamics. Less known, ice volcanoes, or cryovolcanoes, are unique geological formations that erupt lahar made of ice, rock fragments, gases, and volatile materials, rather than molten rock. This intermezzo connects spacetimemattering and the geologic commons, to reveal the potential for geosocial formations to be in relations with our non-human environments. Cryovolcanoes, earthworm subjectivities, and mineral becomings are the ways we can start to develop geosocial relations, by tunnelling into and through human and non-human relationality we can find more generative and capacious ways to act.
