ISBN-13: 9781032009421 / Twarda / 2023 / 408 str.
The Routledge Handbook of Ecomedia Studies gathers leading work by critical scholars in this burgeoning field.
"This Handbook undertakes a crucial reboot of media studies in light of the global climate crisis, reckoning with an array of urgent planetary matters. Assembling the most lucid thinkers in ecomedia studies, the book confronts the entanglement of media and ecology and unfurls vital forms of research and action."
Lisa Parks, Distinguished Professor of Media Studies, UC Santa Barbara
"Media Studies should always have been Ecomedia Studies, but it wasn’t. A generation of pioneer scholars worked to change that, and most of them have written chapters for this absolutely essential collection. This book will from now on be a key reference-point."
Nick Couldry, London School of Economics and Political Science
"This collection is extremely useful in both being aware of the earlier waves of eco-criticism while stating out clearly and in depth that the only way forward for media studies is with ecology at its core – not just as one ‘theme’ but as the very essence of how politics and planetary futures unfold. The Handbook will become essential reading."
Jussi Parikka, Aarhus University, author of Insect Media and A Geology of Media
"The Routledge Handbook of Ecomedia Studies is a timely constellation of essays that whirls into the elements, borderlands, digital worlds, energetics, and spheres of affect—addressing how media not only represent the environment but are fundamentally of the environment. This book will be a valuable reference for years to come."
Melody Jue, Associate Professor of English, UC Santa Barbara, author of Wild Blue Media
Introduction
Antonio López, Adrian Ivakhiv, Stephen Rust, Miriam Tola, Alenda Y. Chang, and Kiu-wai Chu
PART I Ecomedia Theory
1 When Do Media Become Ecomedia?
Adrian Ivakhiv and Antonio López
2 Three Ecologies: Ecomediality as Ontology
Adrian Ivakhiv
3 Meaning, Matter, Ecomedia
Christy Tidwell
4 Blue Media Ecologies: Swimming through the Mediascape with Sir David Attenborough
Stephen Rust and Verena Wurth
5 Political and Apolitical Ecologies of Digital Media
Sy Taffel
6 Centering Africa in Ecomedia Studies: Interview with Cajetan Iheka
Miriam Tola, Kiu-wai Chu, and Stephen Rust
7 Ecomedia and Empire in the US–Mexico Borderlands, 1880–1912
Carlos Alonso Nugent
8 Spatial Documentary Studies, El Mar La Mar, and Elemental Media Remediated
Janet Walker
9 Ecomedia Literacy: Bringing Ecomedia Studies into the Classroom
Antonio López
PART II Ecomateriality
10 Disaggregated Footprints: An Infrastructural Literacy Approach to the Sustainable Internet
Nicole Starosielski, Hunter Vaughan , Anne Pasek, and Nicholas R. Silcox
11 Collapse Informatics and the Environmental Impact of Information and Communication Technologies
Laura U. Marks
12 Electronic Environmentalism: Monitoring and Making Ecological Crises
Jennifer Gabrys
13 Radiant Energy and Media Infrastructures of the South
Rahul Mukherjee
14 Micro/Climates of Play: On the Thermal Contexts of Games
Alenda Y. Chang
15 Relational Ecologies of the Gramophone Disc
Elodie A. Roy
16 Core Dump: The Global Aesthetics and Politics of E-Waste
Mehita Iqani
PART III Political Ecology
17 Carbon Capitalism, Communication, and Artificial Intelligence: Placing the Climate Emergency Center Stage
Benedetta Brevini and Daisy Doctor
18 Environmental Media Management: Overcoming the Responsibility Deficit
Pietari Kääpä and Hunter Vaughan
19 Property Rights Control in the Data-Driven Economy: The Media Ecology of Blockchain Registries
Jannice Käll
20 Common Pool Resources, Communication, and the Global Media Commons
Patrick D. Murphy and E. Septime Sessou
21 #NOLNG253! Media Use in Modern Environmental Justice Movements
Ellen E. Moore and Anna Bean
22 Contesting Digital Colonial Power: Indigenous Australian Sovereignty and Self-Determination in Digital Worlds
Corrinne Sullivan and Jessica McLean
23 Who Makes Our Smartphones? Four Moments in Their Lifecycle
Richard Maxwell and Toby Miller
PART IV Ecocultures
24 Media and Ecocultural Identity
Tema Milstein, Gabi Mocatta, and José Castro-Sotomayor
25 Eco-Territorial Media Practices: Defending Bodies, Territories, and Life Itself in Latin America
Diana Coryat
26 Mapping for Accountability: Decolonizing Land Acknowledgment Initiatives
Salma Monani and Sarah Gilsoul
27 Black Media Philosophy and Visual Ecologies: A Conversation between Armond Towns and Jeremy Kamal
Armond Towns and Jeremy Kamal
28 On the Ecological Futurabilities of Experimental Film Labs
Noélie Martin and Jacopo Rasmi
29 Popular Music: Folk and Folk Rock as Green Cultural Production
John Parham
30 Women in the Global Pandemic Media Imagination: Mimetic Desire, Scapegoating Buddhist Hermeneutic, and Beyond
Chia-ju Chang
PART V Eco-Affects
31 Ecomentia, from Televised Catastrophe to Performative Assembly: Collapsonaut Attention in a House on Fire
Yves Citton
32 Feeling Wild: The Mediation of Embodied Experience
Alexa Weik von Mossner
33 Social Realism and Environmental Crisis: Clio Barnard’s Dark River
David Ingram
34 Ecopolitical Satire in the Global North
Nicole Seymour and Anthony Lioi
35 Fear and Loathing in Ecomedia: Channeling Fear through Horror Tropes in Invasive Species Outreach
Katrina Maggiulli
36 Slow Media, Eco-Mindfulness, and the Lifeworld
Jennifer Rauch
Antonio López is Professor of Communications and Media Studies at John Cabot University in Rome, Italy. He has a research focus on bridging ecojustice with media education and is a founding theorist and architect of ecomedia literacy. He created the website ecomedialiteracy.org to provide resources for students and educators. His monographs are Ecomedia Literacy: Integrating Ecology into Media Education (2021), Greening Media Education: Bridging Media Literacy with Green Cultural Citizenship (2014), The Media Ecosystem: What Ecology Can Teach Us About Responsible Media Practice (2012), and Mediacology: A Multicultural Approach to Media Literacy in the 21st Century (2008).
Adrian Ivakhiv is Professor of Environmental Thought and Culture, and Steven Rubenstein Professor of Environment and Natural Resources, at the University of Vermont. From 2024 he will be J. S. Woodsworth Chair in the Humanities at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver. His books include Ecologies of the Moving Image: Cinema, Affect, Nature (2013), Shadowing the Anthropocene: Eco-Realism for Turbulent Times (2018), and the forthcoming The New Lives of Images: Digital Ecologies and Anthropocene Imaginaries in More-than-Human Worlds. He is Research Fellow of the Cinepoetics Centre for Advanced Film Studies at Freie Universität Berlin, co-edits the Media+Environment journal, and blogs at Immanence: Ecoculture, Geophilosophy, MediaPolitics.
Stephen Rust teaches Cinema Studies and Writing at the University of Oregon and Oregon State University. He is co-editor of Ecocinema Theory and Practice (2013), Ecomedia: Key Issues (2016), and Ecocinema Theory and Practice 2 (2023), and is a founding advisory board member of Media+Environment and the Journal of Environmental Media.
Miriam Tola is Assistant Professor at John Cabot University in Rome, Italy. Her work explores the intersections between gender, race, species, and the cultural politics of the environmental crisis.
Her articles have appeared in journals including South Atlantic Quarterly, Feminist Review, Environmental Humanities, and Feminist Studies. She is the co-editor of Living Lexicon for the Environmental Humanities and Ecologie della cura.
Alenda Y. Chang is Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her book, Playing Nature: Ecology in Video Games, develops environmentally informed frameworks for understanding and designing digital games. She is a founding co-editor of the open-access journal Media+Environment and co-directs Wireframe, a studio that fosters collaborative theory and creative media practice invested in global social and environmental justice.
Kiu-wai Chu is Assistant Professor of Environmental Humanities and Chinese Studies at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He is also Luce East Asia Fellow 2022–2023 at the National Humanities Center, USA. He is currently Executive Councillor of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE-US) and Living Lexicon co-editor of Environmental Humanities. His research focus includes ecocriticism, human–animal studies, and contemporary film and art in Chinese and global Asian contexts. His work has appeared in Transnational Ecocinema, Ecomedia: Key Issues, Chinese Environmental Humanities, Journal of Chinese Cinemas, Asian Cinema, photographies, and Screen.
1997-2024 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa