Ephemeral Coast: Visualizing Coastal Climate Change (Color)

Author:   Celina Jeffery
Publisher:   Vernon Press
ISBN:  

9781648894992


Pages:   204
Publication Date:   05 July 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Ephemeral Coast: Visualizing Coastal Climate Change (Color)


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Overview

Ephemeral Coast - Visualizing Coastal Climate Change considers the ways that art can offer a means through which to discover, analyze, re-imagine and re-frame emotive discourses about the ecological and cultural transformations of the coastline. This edited anthology takes ephemerality as its central conceptual and methodological framework and presents a series of essays that create interconnections between environmental and social considerations of the coast, a succession of embodied creative practices, and shifting regional geographic identities. The book presents a series of specific case studies of artistic practices and strategies that seek to capture the rewriting of cartographic maps that are being reshaped by rising seas, coastal flooding and catastrophic weather. The essays in this edited volume engender creative strategies for understanding new and uncertain coastal ecologies and the loss, expulsion or destruction of their associated cultures, habitats, species and ecosystems. The anthology also looks at the historical, mnemonic and contemporary transitional conditions of 'conflicted' coastal spaces in which empire, modernity and globalization press on coastal erosion and incursions, proliferate it with trivial plastics, pollution and disposable attitudes, and bring vulnerable communities into uncertain futures.

Full Product Details

Author:   Celina Jeffery
Publisher:   Vernon Press
Imprint:   Vernon Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.386kg
ISBN:  

9781648894992


ISBN 10:   1648894992
Pages:   204
Publication Date:   05 July 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Ephemeral Coast: Visualizing Coastal Climate Change is a significant contribution to the Blue Humanities and to Contemporary Ecocritical Art History and criticism, offering a text that is readable and accessible to a wide audience, incorporating clear discussions and integrations of contemporary art practices, ecocritical theory, and environmental science and journalism. Chapters incorporate important voices in the decolonial environmental humanities and a global range of artists, theorists, sites, and specific projects. Throughout the text there is a conscious centering of Indigenous histories, critics and makers. Many urgent themes carry across its chapters such as commitment to ephemeral statuses of land and sea; contemporary relational research models and modes of visualization; the significance of effective storytelling; contentious extractive claims to shorelines, bodies of water and ice; environmental and social justice activism, indigenous ecologies and Land relationships and the agency of artists' creative imaginations and visualizations. Ephemeral Coast is an ideal text for an art and ecology or environmental humanities course and a very lucid argument for the agency of the Blue Humanities. Prof. Maura Coughlin Department of Art + Design Northeastern University


Author Information

Celina Jeffery is an Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Ottawa, Canada. Recent publications include Ephemeral Coast (2015), The Artist as Curator (2015), the 'Junk Ocean' issue of Drain: A Journal of Contemporary Art and Culture (January 2016) and the 'Towards a Blue Humanity' issue of Symploke (2019), co-edited with Ian Buchanan. She is the founder of Ephemeral Coast www.ephemeralcoast.com, a SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council) funded, curatorial research project (2015-2019). She has curated exhibitions internationally which explore the visual cultures of climate change.

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