Ice Humanities

Ice Humanities
Author: Klaus Dodds,Sverker Sörlin
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2022-07-26
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1526157772

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Ice humanities is a path-breaking collection of essays that tackles the existential crisis posed by the loss or lack of ice. For hundreds of millions of people, often Indigenous and vulnerable communities around the world, ice is integral to water security, mobility, and access to food as well as providing a habitat for marine mammals. Our relationship to ice has evolved over millennia and the knowledge base ranges from oral testimony to technical-scientific expertise. Ice has not only been integral to back-casting past climates but also a vital accomplice for speculations concerning the earth's future. This collection develops the field of ice humanities in order to reveal the centrality of ice and the need to understand better why, where, and how it matters to both human and animal life.

Communicating Ice through Popular Art and Aesthetics

Communicating Ice through Popular Art and Aesthetics
Author: Anne Hemkendreis
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2024
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9783031397875

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Living and Working With Snow Ice and Seasons in the Modern Arctic

Living and Working With Snow  Ice and Seasons in the Modern Arctic
Author: Hannah Strauss-Mazzullo,Monica Tennberg
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2023-10-02
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9783031364457

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This book describes everyday practices of life in changing Arctic winter conditions. The authors explore the contemporary and situated outdoor practices in different work settings in Finnish Lapland and investigate how, for example, tourism, reindeer herding, cattle breeding and urban snow management adapt to the physically limiting or enabling features of cold temperatures, snow and ice. The book also highlights individual and societal adjustments to such harsh conditions and their seasonal changes in mobility, including winter cycling, use of snow mobiles and walking with studded shoes. The impact of a warming climate is a great concern for those utilising the enabling qualities of winter weather. The need, then, for continuous adaptation in everyday practices of work and mobility will increase in the future.

Antarctica and the Humanities

Antarctica and the Humanities
Author: Roberts Peder,Lize-Marié van der Watt,Adrian Howkins
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2016-08-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781137545756

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The continent for science is also a continent for the humanities. Despite having no indigenous human population, Antarctica has been imagined in powerful, innovative, and sometimes disturbing ways that reflect politics and culture much further north. Antarctica has become an important source of data for natural scientists working to understand global climate change. As this book shows, the tools of literary studies, history, archaeology, and more, can likewise produce important insights into the nature of the modern world and humanity more broadly.

The Routledge Companion to the Environmental Humanities

The Routledge Companion to the Environmental Humanities
Author: Ursula K. Heise,Jon Christensen,Michelle Niemann
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 490
Release: 2017-01-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781317660194

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The Routledge Companion to the Environmental Humanities provides a comprehensive, transnational, and interdisciplinary map to the field, offering a broad overview of its founding principles while providing insight into exciting new directions for future scholarship. Articulating the significance of humanistic perspectives for our collective social engagement with ecological crises, the volume explores the potential of the environmental humanities for organizing humanistic research, opening up new forms of interdisciplinarity, and shaping public debate and policies on environmental issues. Sections cover: The Anthropocene and the Domestication of Earth Posthumanism and Multispecies Communities Inequality and Environmental Justice Decline and Resilience: Environmental Narratives, History, and Memory Environmental Arts, Media, and Technologies The State of the Environmental Humanities The first of its kind, this companion covers essential issues and themes, necessarily crossing disciplines within the humanities and with the social and natural sciences. Exploring how the environmental humanities contribute to policy and action concerning some of the key intellectual, social, and environmental challenges of our times, the chapters offer an ideal guide to this rapidly developing field.

Environmental Humanities in Central Asia

Environmental Humanities in Central Asia
Author: Jeanne Féaux de la Croix,Beatrice Penati
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2023-08-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781000983197

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This book is the first collection to showcase the flourishing field of environmental humanities in Central Asia. A region larger than Europe, Central Asia possesses an astounding range of environments, from deserts to glaciated peaks. The volume brings into conversation scholarship from history to social anthropology, demonstrating the contribution that interdisciplinary and engaged research offers to many urgent issues in the region: from the history of conservationism to the tactics of environmental movements, from literary engagements with ‘pure nature’ to the impact of fossil fuel extraction. The collection focuses on the Central Asian republics of the former USSR, where a complex layering of nomadic and sedentary, Turkic and Persianate, Islamic and Soviet cultures ends up affecting human relations with distinct environments. Featuring state-of-the-art contributions, the book enquires into human-environment relations through a broad-brush typology of interactive modes: to extract, protect, enspirit and fear. Broadening the scope of analysis beyond a consideration of power, the authors bring into focus alternative local cosmologies and the unintended consequences of environmental policy. The volume highlights scholarship from within Central Asia as well as expertise elsewhere, offering readers diverse modes of knowledge-production in the environmental humanities. This book is an important resource for researchers and students of the environmental humanities, sustainability, history, politics, anthropology and geography of Asia, as well as Soviet and Post-Soviet studies.

Game of Thrones A View from the Humanities Vol 1

Game of Thrones   A View from the Humanities Vol  1
Author: Alfonso Álvarez-Ossorio,Fernando Lozano,Rosario Moreno Soldevila,Cristina Rosillo-Lopez
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 374
Release: 2023-03-20
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9783031154898

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This book reflects on time, space and culture in the Game of Thrones universe. It analyses both the novels and the TV series from a multidisciplinary perspective ultimately aimed at highlighting the complexity, eclecticism and diversity that characterises Martin’s world. The book is divided into three thematic sections. The first section focuses on space—both the urban and natural environment—and the interaction between human beings and their surroundings. The second section follows different yet complementary approaches to Game of Thrones from an aesthetic and cultural perspective. The final section addresses the linguistic and translation implications of the Game of Thrones universe, as well as its didactic uses. This book is paired with a second volume that focuses on the characters that populate Martin’s universe, as well as on one of the ways in which they often interact—violence and warfare—from the same multidisciplinary perspective.

Performing Ice

Performing Ice
Author: Carolyn Philpott,Elizabeth Leane,Matt Delbridge
Publsiher: Palgrave Macmillan
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2021-10-11
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 3030473902

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In the Anthropocene, icy environments have taken on a new centrality and emotional valency. This book examines the diverse ways in which ice and humans have performed with and alongside each other over the last few centuries, so as to better understand our entangled futures. Icescapes – glaciers, bergs, floes, ice shelves – are places of paradox. Solid and weighty, they are nonetheless always on the move, unstable, untrustworthy, liable to collapse, overturn, or melt. Icescapes have featured – indeed, starred – in conventional theatrical performances since at least the eighteenth century. More recently, the performing arts – site-specific or otherwise – have provoked a different set of considerations of human interactions with these non-human objects, particularly as concerns over anthropogenic warming have mounted. The performances analysed in the book range from the theatrical to the everyday, from the historical to the contemporary, from low-latitude events in interior spaces to embodied encounters with the frozen environment.