Earth, Milky Way: punctum books, 2018. 266 pages, illus. ISBN-13: 978-1-947447-69-1. DOI: 10.21983/P3.0207.1.00. OPEN-ACCESS e-book and $22.00 in print: paperbound/5 X 8 in.

This is plant writing: an openness to the other, to sentience, sapience, and forms of life that are distinctly botanical.

~ Baylee Brits and Prudence Gibson, “Introduction”

Covert Plants: Vegetal Consciousness and Agency in an Anthropocentric World

Covert Plants contributes to newly emerging discourses on the implications of vegetal life for the arts and culture. This stretches to changes in our perception of ‘nature’ and to the adapting roles of botany, evolutionary ecology, and environmental aesthetics in the humanities. Its editors and contributors seek various expressions of vegetal life rather than the mere representation of such, and they proceed from the conviction that a rigorous approach to thinking with and through vegetal life must be interdisciplinary. At a time when urgent calls for restorative care and reparative action have been sounded for the environment, this essay volume presents a range of academic and creative perspectives, from evolutionary biology to literary theory, philosophy to poetry, which respond to the perplexing problems and paradoxes of vegetal thinking.

Representations of vegetal life often include plant analogies and plant imagery. These representations have at times obscured the diversity of plant behavior and experience. Covert Plants probes the implications of vegetal life for thought and how new plant science is changing our perception of the vegetal — around us and in us. How can we think, speak, and write about plant life without falling into human-nature dyads, or without tumbling into reductive theoretical notions about the always complex relations between cognition and action, identity and value, subject and object?

A full view of this shifting perspective requires a ‘stereoscopic’ lens through which to view plants, but also simultaneously to alter our human-centered viewpoint. Plants are no longer the passive object of contemplation, but are increasingly resembling ‘subjects,’ ‘stakeholders,’ or ‘actors.’ As such, the plant now makes unprecedented demands upon the nature of contemplation itself. Moreover, the aesthetic, political, and legal implications of new knowledge regarding plants’ ability to communicate, sense, and learn require intensive, cross-disciplinary investigation. By doing this, we can intervene into current attitudes to climate change and sustainability, and hopefully revise, for the better, human philosophies, ethics, and aesthetics that touch upon plant life.

TABLE OF CONTENTS//

Baylee Brits and Prudence Gibson, “Introduction: Covert Plants”

Part I — Express, Present, Represent

 Prudence Gibson, “Interview with Michael Marder”

Stephen Muecke, “Mixed up with Trees: The Gadgur and the Dreaming”

Paul Dawson, “Lover Nature”

Andrew Belletty, “An Ear to the Ground”

Luke Ficher, “Gardening / Grasshopper in a Field”

Tessa Laird, “Spores from Space: Becoming the Alien”

Part II — Thinking Plants

Baylee Brits, “Brain Trees: Neuroscientific Metaphor and Botanical Thought”

Dalia Nassar, “Metaphoric Plants: Goethe’s Metamorphosis of Plants and the Metaphors of Reason”

Tamryn Bennett, “Icaro / Heyowicinayo”

Ben Woodard, “Continuous Green Abstraction: Embodied Knowledge, Intuition, and Metaphor”

Lisa Dowdall, “Figures”

Part III – Political Landscapes

Prudence Gibson, “The Colour Green”

Monica Gagliano, “Persons as Plants: Eco-psychology and the Return to the Dream of Nature”

Justin Clemens, “Rooted”

Lucas Ihlein, “Agricultural Inventiveness: Beyond Environmental Management?”

Susie Pratt, “Trees as Landlords and Other Public Experiments: An Interview with Natalie Jeremijenko”

Jennifer Mae Hamilton, “Gardening After the Anthropocene: Creating Different Relations between Humans and Edible Plants in Sydney”

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