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Full Description
Human-Plant Entanglement: Thinking with Plants in the Anthropocene presents a collection of chapters that transcends geographical limits to offer boldly original and critically nuanced insights into phytocentric creative-critical enterprises. It is an essential read for scholars, environmentalists, and anyone interested in our intertwined future with plants.
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
List of Figures and Tables
Introduction
Alexandra M. Peck
Part 1: Human-Plant and Territoriality
Charles Edenshaw's "Fungus Man" Platters and Tlingit Grave Effigies: Exploring Human-Fungus Relationships through Agarikon Art
Alexandra M. Peck
How to Coexist: the Teaching of the Plant Kingdom at the Universities of Coimbra and Salamanca (XVIII-XIX)
Carlos Alves
Tēichigi Colors of Artistic Resistance
James Jack
Plant-Thinking and Critical Pedagogy in Costa Rica: The Revolutionary Praxis of Carmen Lyra
Juan Manuel Ávila Conejo
Part 2: Human-Plant and the Literary
The Root of the Problem: How Trees Can Be Utilized in Climate Change Literature to Depict the Interconnectedness of Past, Present and Future
Andrea Färber
Multispecies Exchange Rates: Multicultural Plant Entanglement in The Embrace of the Serpent
Jacob Price
Enchanting Encounters with Plants in Reshma Aquil and Sumana Roy's Poems
Nesrin Eruysal
Flowering-with the Silence of Plant: Affective Attuning to the Vegetal Event in Tang Poetry
Perkus Leung
Part 3: Human-Plant and Transfiguration
Vegetal Apophasis: Reclaiming Dark Intimacies and Un/knowing with Plants
Clara Soudan
To Be a Pixel Flower: Player-Plant Entanglement in Video Games
Carolin Becklas
Theatrics of the West, and Geopolitical Economy in the Plantationocene: Opium Poppy and Its Nation-Based Phenomenological Understanding
Sindhura Dutta
Index