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Communicating in the Anthropocene: Intimate Relations [Kietas viršelis]

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The purpose of Communicating in the Anthropocene: Intimate Relations is to tell a different story about the world. Humans, especially those raised in Western traditions, have long told stories about themselves as individual protagonists who act with varying degrees of free will against a background of mute supporting characters and inert landscapes. Humans can be either saviors or destroyers, but our actions are explained and judged again and again as emanating from the individual. And yet, as the coronavirus pandemic has made clear, humans are unavoidably interconnected not only with other humans, but with nonhuman and more-than-human others with whom we share space and time. Why do so many of us humans avoid, deny, or resist a view of the world where our lives are made possible, maybe even made richer, through connection? In this volume, we suggest a view of communication as intimacy. We use this concept as a provocation for thinking about how we humans are in an always-already state of being-in-relation with other humans, nonhumans, and the land.
Foreword: Undisciplined Stories ix
Carol J. Adams
Acknowledgments xiii
1 Introduction: Intimate Relations For Earthly Survival
1(10)
Alexa M. Dare
C. Vail Fletcher
PART I GRIEF, RESILIENCE, AND STORYTELLING
11(68)
2 Vigilant Mourning And The Future Of Earthly Coexistence
13(22)
Joshua Trey Barnett
3 Presence And Absence In The Watershed: Storytelling For The Symbiocene
35(18)
Emily Plec
4 The Trouble With Resilience
53(16)
Jessica Holmes
5 Solastalgia And Art Therapy In Climate Change
69(4)
Chelsea Call
6 Living (In) Spider Webs: More-Than-Human Intimacy In Installation Art By Tomas Saraceno
73(6)
Katharina Alsen
PART II NONHUMAN COLLABORATORS: OYSTERS, BIRDS, AND ELEPHANTS
79(74)
7 The Permeable Heart: Mindfulness In Animal-Human Communication
81(4)
Peggy J. Bowers
8 Intimacy On The Half-Shell: Place, Oysters, And The Emerging Narrative Of Virginia Aquaculture
85(20)
Anne K. Armstrong
Richard C. Stedman
Marianne E. Krasny
9 I Am Naiad: Becoming Benthic
105(6)
Laura C. Carlson
10 Ada Clapham Govan And "Birds I Know": Ecological Intimacy In A Mass-Mediated Sisterhood
111(16)
Peter W. Oehlkers
Anna Ijiri Oehlkers
11 Dialogic Elephant And Human Relations In Sri Lanka As Social Practices Of Cohabitation
127(20)
Elizabeth Oriel
Deepani Jayantha
Amal Dissanayaka
12 Ocean Medicine, Mother Medicine, Sky Medicine
147(6)
Michaela Keeble
PART III PLANTS AND OTHER FAMILY MEMBERS
153(70)
13 Weirding Wellness: Mushrooms, Medicine, And The Uncanny Renaissance Of Psilocybin In The Chthulucene
155(18)
Josh Potter
14 Multispecies Motherhood: Connecting With Plants Through Processes Of Procreation
173(24)
Mariko Oyama Thomas
15 Plant Persons, More-Than-Human Power, And Institutional Practices In Indigenous Higher Education
197(18)
Keith Williams
Suzanne Brant
16 Oak
215(2)
Marybeth Holleman
17 Objects/Ecologies: Jardin D'Incertitude Le Systeme Ecologique et l'objet Technologique
217(6)
Christianna Bennett
PART IV NONHUMAN AGENCY, ACTIVISM, AND LEGAL PERSONHOOD
223(108)
18 If The Ocean Were A Person
225(6)
Jenny Rock
Ellen Sima
19 Personal Affairs: Litigating Nonhuman Animal Personhood In The Anthropocene
231(22)
S. Marek Muller
20 Tahlequah's Internatural Activism: Situating The Body And The Intimacy Of Grief As Evidence Of Human-Caused Climate Change
253(22)
Madrone Kalil Schutten
21 Never The Same River Twice: How Legal Personhood Of Rivers Affects Perceived Stability Of Policy Solutions
275(24)
Carie Steele
22 The Titans At The Heart Of The Anthropocene: Diving Into The Nonhuman Imagery Of Leviathan
299(22)
Patricia Castello Branco
23 Listen To The Lake: Nature As Stakeholder
321(4)
Kathy Isaacson
24 The Geo-Doc: A Proposed New Communications Tool For Planetary Health
325(6)
Mark Terry
PART V GENDER, EARTHLY INTIMACIES, AND OTHER TROUBLE
331(66)
25 Intimate Dwelling And Mourning Loss In The (M)Anthropocene: Ecological Masculinities And The Felt Self
333(20)
Todd Levasseur
Paul M. Pule
26 The Climate Gaze And Koalas In Extremis
353(18)
Lyn Mcgaurr
Libby Lester
27 From Fatbergs To Microplastics: New Intimacies Of An Extruded World
371(16)
Paul Alberts
28 Doga Icin Cal (Play For Nature)
387(6)
Cagri Yilmaz
29 Subversive Art: Communicating The Climate Crisis On A Planetary Scale
393(4)
Catherine Sarah Young
Index 397(8)
About the Editors, Contributing Authors, and Artists 405
Vail Fletcher is associate professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Portland and co-director of the Gender and Womens Studies program.

Alexa Dare is associate professor of communication at the University of Portland where she also directs the social justice minor