Multispecies Storytelling in Intermedial Practices
- Edited by Ida Bencke, Jørgen Bruhn
Published on March 10, 2022 by punctum books
- Pages
- 324 pages
- Languages
- English
- Dimensions
- 7⤫10 in.
- ISBN (Paperback)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-022-4 (Paperback)
- ISBN (PDF)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-023-1 (PDF)
- LCCN
- LCCN: 2022932942
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: ART017000, NAT024000
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: AFKP, AFKV, AGNA, PSAF
Multispecies Storytelling in Intermedial Practices is a speculative endeavor asking how we may represent, relay, and read worlds differently by seeing other species as protagonists in their own rights. What other stories are to be invented and told from within those many-tongued chatters of multispecies collectives? Could such stories teach us how to become human otherwise?
Often, the human is defined as the sole creature who holds language, and consequently is capable of articulating, representing, and reflecting upon the world. And yet, the world is made and remade by ongoing and many-tongued conversations between various organisms reverberating with sound, movement, gestures, hormones, and electrical signals. Everywhere, life is making itself known, heard, and understood in a wide variety of media and modalities. Some of these registers are available to our human senses, while some are not.
Facing a not-so-distant catastrophe, which in many ways and for many of us is already here, it is becoming painstakingly clear that our imaginaries are in dire need of corrections and replacements. How do we cultivate and share other kinds of stories and visions of the world that may hold promises of modest, yet radical hope? If we keep reproducing the same kind of languages, the same kinds of scientific gatekeeping, the same kinds of stories about “our” place in nature, we remain numb in the face of collapse.
Multispecies Storytelling in Intermedial Practices offers steps toward a (self)critical multispecies philosophy which interrogates and qualifies the broad and seemingly neutral concept of humanity utilized in and around conversations grounded within Western science and academia. Artists, activists, writers, and scientists give a myriad of different interpretations of how to tell our worlds using different media, and possibly gives hints as to how to change it, too.
Contents
Frontmatter (1–8)
Ida Bencke, Jørgen Bruhn
Introduction (9–20)
Ida Bencke, Jørgen Bruhn
Politics of Terristories (21–32)
Vinciane Despret
Secretome Perpetua (33–48)
Karin Bolender
Tales of a Modern Parrot: Living Entangled Lives in an Interspecies Art Collective (50–75)
Ute Hörner, Mathias Antlfinger
The Laudable Cow: Poetics of Human/Cattle Relationships (77–95)
Emily McGriffin
The Forest of Life: The Representation of the “Tree of Life” Metaphor across Media (97–119)
Péter Kristóf Makai
The Plant-story? Listening and Multispecies Storytelling (121–150)
Fröydi Laszlo
Arrangements for an African Anthropocene: Multispecies Storytelling at the Adderley Street Flower Market in Cape Town (151–173)
Melanie Boehi
“You have to learn the language of how to communicate with the plants” and Other Selva Stories (175–187)
Kristina Van Dexter
The Anti Menagerie: Fictions for Interrogating the Supremacy of World-shaping Violence (189–214)
Cassandra Troyan, Helen V. Pritchard
#FEELSWeoutheregettinthisbread (215–224)
Gillian Wylde
Learning from the Lake (225–236)
Katie Lawson
Lagomorph Lessons: Feminist Methods for Environmental Sensing and Sensemaking (237–253)
Maya Livio
The Blattarians (255–265)
Adam Dickinson
WERT: Interspecies Weaving and Becoming (267–278)
Carol Padberg
Creating Distance or Proximity? How Wild Lives Are Told through Remote Camera Viewing (279–301)
Elizabeth Vander Meer
Dancing Is an Ecosystem Service, and So Is Being Trans (303–311)
Loup Rivière
Contributor Biographies (313–317)
Ida Bencke, Jørgen Bruhn
Biographies
Ida Bencke, MA, is an independent curator with the Laboratory for Aesthetics and Ecology, based in Copenhagen, Denmark. Her curatorial work spans experimental exhibition formats and speculative ecofeminist aesthetics. Her recent exhibition projects explore questions around shared vulnerabilities and technologies of care and resistance within a more-than-human field. Research interests include the political implications and radical potentials of rest, refusal, and pleasure politics.
Jørgen Bruhn is professor of Comparative Literature at Linnæus University, Sweden. His most recent monographs are The Intermediality of Narrative Literature: Medialities Matter (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016) and, with Anne Gjelsvik, Cinema Between Media: An Intermedial Approach (Edinburgh, 2018). Bruhn’s main research areas are intermediality and media studies, ecocriticism and environmental humanities. He is currently writing a book, with Niklas Salmose, with the working title Intermedial Ecocriticism: Anthropocene Representations across Media, for Lexington Books.
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Funding
- Brock University(opens in new tab)
Program: Tattersall Lab
Genres
- Anthropocene
- Biosphere
- Media+Technology
Keywords
- artistic research
- climate emergency
- ecosystems
- intermediality
- media studies
- multimedia art
- multispecies narratives
