All Articles tagged climate change
- Special issues: creative works
July 31, 2023 AEST Using the technique of concrete poetry, each poem syncretises hidden elements that speak to the effects of extremity.
- Scholarly articles
April 30, 2023 AEST This article argues that the short story cycle is ideally suited to capture the everyday experience of the Anthropocene, particularly as it manifests through encounters with climate disaster.
- Scholarly articles
April 30, 2023 AEST What happens when an artistic work, pitched as “soft sci-fi”, predicts something both decidedly unpleasurable and, later, alarmingly prophetic?
- Scholarly articles
April 30, 2023 AEST This collaborative essay sits at the nexus of creative writing, nature writing and animal studies, and explores living ethically and joyflully in the context of anthropogenic climate change.
- Scholarly articles
April 29, 2022 AEST This paper considers an evolving project about climate change that will explore using collaborative creative writing strategies to emotionally support and engage writers.
- Scholarly articles
April 30, 2021 AEST This article advocates for the utility of multirealism for writing about the climate crisis.
- Special Issues: scholarly article
October 30, 2020 AEST This paper reflects on the transnational journeys poets make as they cross and re-cross nation-state boundaries.
- Special Issues: scholarly article
October 30, 2020 AEST Drawing on feminist and ecofeminist theories in connection with Félix Guatari’s work on the ‘three ecologies’, the article probes interconnections between environmental and social issues in Australia and India.
- Special Issues: scholarly article
October 31, 2018 AEST Climate change poses massive and varied challenges to the ways in which people live throughout the Asia-Pacific region...
- Special Issues: scholarly article
October 31, 2018 AEST In this paper, we use Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy as a case study of how cli-fi novels can interrogate climate change by using food as a symbolic and narrative device.
- Special Issues: scholarly article
October 31, 2017 AEST This paper discusses the environmental and eco-critical themes embedded in two of my theatrical works, Dust 2016 and Salvation 2013.
- Special Issues: scholarly article
April 30, 2017 AEST Thea Astley’s millennial novel Drylands, a self-declared ‘book for the world’s last reader’, offers an opportunity to reappraise literary narrative and creative experimentation in a time of climate change.