Ecologies of Life and Death in the Anthropocene
open access | peer reviewed-
edited by
- Peggy Karpouzou - National and Kapodistian University of Athens, Greece - email orcid profile
- Nikoleta Zampaki - National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece - email orcid profile
The special issue titled Ecologies of Life and Death in the Anthropocene examines a multifaceted notion of ecology: life and death involve numerous entities, processes and relationalities that cannot be analyzed separately. Grounded in the theoretical frameworks of environmental humanities, blue humanities, continental philosophy, arts and film studies, this special issue explores life and death eco-imaginaries and entanglements of the human and non-human world, highlighting an eco-ontology that exposes these entanglements where ethical territories of eco-grief and eco-mourning are unfolded. This special issue is structured in three main axes: articles that study existential aspects of death and life in the Anthropocene and are apt to environmental approaches concerning the intricate relationship between death and life in water narratives, articles that focus on how to deal with eco-grief through the literary and artistic conceptualization of the ecologies of life and death, and articles that shed light on alternative ecologies of life and death beyond the Anthropocene and the western discourses. The discussion about various narratives of ecologies of life and death moves across boundaries, considering that all research fields involve forms of expression that somehow ‘disrupt’ entrenched patterns while at the same time ‘revealing’ their contingency and opening the discussion about life and death, ‘(un)settling’ dominant grief imaginaries and ‘mobilizing’ different sensibilities for the humans and non-humans.
Keywords Intersectionality • Cinema • Northeast India • Samuel Beckett • Informational picturebooks • Donna Haraway • Ethics • Slow violence • Val Plumwood • Death • Ecological mourning • Harlem Renaissance • Humanism • Caroline Walker Bynum • Slime • Continental Philosophy • Chinese Contemporary Art • Eco-critical dystopia • Georges Bataille • Life • Necrocene • Animal Studies • Comedy • Water • Multispecies studies • Cyborg • Wetland ecology • Ecofeminism • Plumwood • Ecology • Eye of the Crocodile • Humanistic Care • Human and nonhuman animal corpse • Wonder • Alenka Zupančič • Sympoiesis • Laughter • Bataille • Crocodile • Land agency • Hegel • Mourning • Human-animal relationship • Death Studies • Anthropocene • Clown • Taxidermy • Loss • Søren Kierkegaard • Posthumanism • Postmodern • Indigenous epistemologies • Postmodernism • Indigeneity • Existentialism • Lila Avilés • New taxidermy • Irony • Ecological grief • Cultural ecology • Traditional knowledge • Grief • Boglands • Sustainability • Literary lagoons • African American Studies • Extinction • James Joyce • Philosophical Animism • Eco-art • Ecocriticism • Environmental mourning • Clowns • Ravencene • Relationality • Eco-horror • Speculative fiction • Planetary literacy • Immanence • Rebirth • Sacrifice zones • Blue humanities • Ecophobia • Ned Beauman • Dark ecology • The Marrow Thieves • Posthuman • Agential narrative • Mexico
Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/LGSP/2785-2709/2024/02 | Published Dec. 6, 2024 | Language en
Copyright © Peggy Karpouzou, Nikoleta Zampaki. This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.