Earth Matters: The Aesthetics and Politics of Soil

Author:   Kassandra Nakas ,  Jessica Ullrich
Publisher:   Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG
ISBN:  

9783662733189


Publication Date:   19 June 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Earth Matters: The Aesthetics and Politics of Soil


Overview

This book addresses the increasing social, scientific and, above all, artistic discussion of soil(s) in current cultural-societal contexts. The end of the „International Decade of Soils“ (2015-2024) marked a development that has focussed on the central importance of the earth for life, biodiversity and climate on our planet since the turn of the millennium. In addition to the political and scientific recognition of this, Earth as a material has increasingly become the centre of cultural and artistic debates. In these debates, the awareness of the earth as a living organism initiated in the social and natural science discourse was taken up and further deepened. Earth is thus understood as a carrier of history, culture and identity, as a distinct and genuinely self-sufficient ecosystem that is, however, existentially threatened by climate change, industrialised and unsustainable forms of agriculture, as well as extractivism. In art, soil has evolved from an aesthetic medium to a carrier of political, ecological and historical statements. Artists today thematise ecological crises, colonial violence, land grabbing, plant blindness and the close relationship between humans and the earth. New narrative, archival and installative forms are emerging in which the earth is not just a material but an actor - often in the sense of a ‘new materialism’ or ‘posthumanism’. Numerous exhibitions worldwide testify to the growing interest in the topic of soil in art. Historical pioneers such as Ana Mendieta, Agnes Denes and herman de vries have laid the foundations for today's positions. Current works often take up Indigenous perspectives, feminist approaches and ecological issues and call for a new relationship with the earth - as a living counterpart, not as an object to be exploited. With a number of essays ranging from Western philosophy to Indigenous epistemology, from historical examples to highly topical activist positions, this book aims to give a comprehensive insight into current theoretical and artistic discourses in ecological art studies. It brings together contributions from different continents that shed light on the topic of soil(s) in distinctive cultural contexts: as a ‘natural given’, political token, artistic matter, mythological bearer, and others. In this light, the eponymous term “soil” is being conceptualized in its pluralistic sense: There is no such thing as definitive and solitary soil, but it has different meanings in different geographical, political, historical and cultural contexts. Contributions by established scholars as well as junior researchers offer a range of methodological approaches: art historical essays weighing in on the aesthetic implications of earthen matter, eco-political and eco-feminist theories, material studies, and others.  

Full Product Details

Author:   Kassandra Nakas ,  Jessica Ullrich
Publisher:   Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG
Imprint:   J.B. Metzler
ISBN:  

9783662733189


ISBN 10:   3662733188
Publication Date:   19 June 2026
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction.- Part I: Into the Soil.- Chapter 2. Assembling, Metabolizing, Surfacing: Aesthetic Strategies for Knowledge Co-Creation in Contemporary Soil Art.- Chapter 3. Soil and Sound. Subterranean Soundscapes and Animal Sound Communication.- Part II: The Politics of Soil: Decolonial and Indigenous Perspectives.- Chapter 4. The Falling Sky: Shamanic Alternatives for a Wild Art History.- Chapter 5. “The Unceasing Chanting of Land”: Abigail Romanchak Recontextualises Seismographic Readings of Kīlauea.- Part III: Agropolitics and Remediaton.- Chapter 6. The Chemical Landscapes of South Tirolean Agricultural Soils: Katrin Hornek’s Plant Plant and Elena Mazzi’s Copperialities.- Chapter 7. Urban Landscape and The Hidden Architecture of Brownfields (On Soil Remediation, Plants, and The Art of SLOW Clean-up).- Part IV: Bodies and Soils.- Chapter 8. Feminist Aesthetics of Body-Territory in Chilean Visual Art.- Chapter 9. Matters of Becoming. Soils and Bodies in Contemporary Art.- Chapter 10. Becoming Soil. Queer Compos(t)ing for Earthly Survival.- Part V: Soil Imaginaries.- Chapter 11. Melting, Pouring, Unearthing. Earth in the Material Aesthetics of Gaston Bachelard.- Chapter 12. The Earth in Art: Māori and New Materialist Perspectives.

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Author Information

Kassandra Nakas received a PhD in art history from the Freie Universität Berlin and a postdoctoral qualification (Habilitation) from Leuphana Universität Lüneburg, where she is also teaching. Previously, she was a visiting professor at the University of Arts (UdK) Berlin, the Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Karlsruhe, and the Ludwig Maximilians Universität in Munich. Jessica Ullrich is visiting professor for aesthetics and art history at the University of Fine Arts Münster. Before that she has taught art history at universities in Berlin, Frankfurt, Erlangen, Nürnberg, Münster, Flensburg, Graz and São Paulo. She publishes widely on human-animal relations in contemporary art and curated art exhibitions and video screenings on the same topic in Berlin, Utrecht, and São Paulo.

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