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Articles 1 - 25 of 25
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Ecopoetry As Mind Into Matter: Some Educational Possibilities
Ecopoetry As Mind Into Matter: Some Educational Possibilities
The International Journal of Ecopsychology (IJE)
In part, this work draws on the revisioning of curriculum in the context of the climate crisis that occupies Chapter 8 of the author’s book on Sense of Place, Identity, and the Revisioning of Curriculum (2023: Springer Nature). The focus here is the “genre” of ecopoetry, described by Walton (2018) as “contributing to the task of repairing divisions between humanity and the ecosystems that constitute and support us” (p. 393). As a response to the Anthropocene, ecopoetry is potentially polemical and activist. However, as it is argued, it can also operate in more covert means by modelling ways in which …
Critically Imagining A Decolonised Vision In Australian Poetry, Cassandra Julie O'Loughlin
Critically Imagining A Decolonised Vision In Australian Poetry, Cassandra Julie O'Loughlin
Landscapes: the Journal of the International Centre for Landscape and Language
Postmodern ecocriticism, given its broad range of perspectives, offers an agreeable platform for articulating a new, advanced and inclusive framework for a decolonising theorisation of literature and the environment. This article seeks to identify Australian Western decolonising poetry that sits in harmony with Indigenous aural and literary versions of communicative engagement with Country. The concept of human embeddedness in ecological relationships and biological processes as part of a complex matrix of interdependent things is embraced. In particular this article focuses on inclusivity and interconnectedness of all life forms to illustrate aesthetic and conceptual interfaces between Aboriginal Australia and Western poetics. …
Caribou Run By Richard Kelly Kemick, Emily Mcgiffin
Caribou Run By Richard Kelly Kemick, Emily Mcgiffin
The Goose
Review of Richard Kelly Kemick's Caribou Run.
Prairie Surreal--A Digital-Poetic Road Trip, Mari-Lou Rowley
Prairie Surreal--A Digital-Poetic Road Trip, Mari-Lou Rowley
The Goose
Poetry by Mari-Lou Rowley
The Anthropocene Lyric: An Affective Geography Of Poetry, Person, Place By Tom Bristow, Mark Dickinson
The Anthropocene Lyric: An Affective Geography Of Poetry, Person, Place By Tom Bristow, Mark Dickinson
The Goose
Review of Tom Bristow's The Anthropocene Lyric: An Affective Geography of Poetry, Person, Place.
Marry & Burn By Rachel Rose, Carolyn J. Creed
Marry & Burn By Rachel Rose, Carolyn J. Creed
The Goose
Review of Rachel Rose's Marry & Burn.
Magnetic North, Pyramiden, Svalbard, Jenna Butler
Magnetic North, Pyramiden, Svalbard, Jenna Butler
The Goose
excerpts from Magnetic North Pyramiden, Svalbard
Excerpts From The Names, Tim Lilburn
Excerpts From The Names, Tim Lilburn
The Goose
A new poetry collection, The Names, from which these excerpts come, will appear spring, 2016.
Bee Work | Departure, Anne Simpson
Bee Work | Departure, Anne Simpson
The Goose
How do we get closer to the nature of the bee’s, or any non-human's, experience, mystery that it is? This essay is a lyrical meditation on the power (and challenges) of poetry and language to access non-human worlds.
In The Loves Of Barnacles, Carol Watts
Neanderthal Dig, Don Mckay
Neanderthal Dig, Don Mckay
The Goose
"Neanderthal Dig" is from McKay's chapbook Larix.
Branches Over Ripples: A Waterside Journal, Brian Bartlett
Branches Over Ripples: A Waterside Journal, Brian Bartlett
The Goose
Branches Over Ripples: A Waterside Journal is a fifty-entry plein-air writing project drafted between April 2013 and October 2014 by various bodies of water—rivers, brooks, lakes, bays, marshes, waterfalls, a vernal pond, a Japanese koi pond. Most of the writing was done in Nova Scotia locations, but some entries were drafted in New Brunswick, Montreal, Missouri, Manhattan, and London, England. I often walked from an hour to four or five hours, then sat down on bare earth, grass, sand, stone, or wood, and wrote, keeping attuned to my surroundings but also letting my mind and memory wander.
2 Poems, Ken Belford
Northern Planing Mills, Adam Dickinson
Fire Sale, Emily Mcgiffin
Vex, A Rawlings
Vex, A Rawlings
The Goose
"Vex" is a visual poem from the serial work Dump. The series focuses on language discarded at rural Canadian landfill sites. "Vex" was sourced at Kennisis Lake Landfill Site, July 2014.
Maybe Poets Are Dying | How Did Birds, Basma Kavanagh
Glove, David Zieroth
Mornlings, Elizabeth-Jane Burnett Dr
Petrocan, Madelaine C. Longman Ms,
Poetry Editorial: Audioecopoetics, Camilla Nelson
Poetry Editorial: Audioecopoetics, Camilla Nelson
The Goose
Poetry Editorial by Camilla Nelson
Subduction Zone By Emily Mcgiffin, Kelly Shepherd
Subduction Zone By Emily Mcgiffin, Kelly Shepherd
The Goose
Kelly Shepherd's review of Subduction Zone by Emily McGiffin.
Mixing It Up: Poetry For The Goose, Camilla Nelson
Mixing It Up: Poetry For The Goose, Camilla Nelson
The Goose
Poetry Editorial by Camilla Nelson
Five Poems, Erin Robinsong
Situating A Badiouian Anthropocene In Hagiwara's Postnatural Poetry, Dean A. Brink
Situating A Badiouian Anthropocene In Hagiwara's Postnatural Poetry, Dean A. Brink
CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture
In his article "Situating a Badiouian Anthropocene in Hagiwara's Postnatural Poetry" Dean A. Brink discusses the ecological dimension of the poetry of one of the founding voices in modern Japanese poetry, Sakutarō Hagiwara (1886-1942). Brink argues that Hagiwara developed a poetics characterized by engagements with nonhuman organisms and actants to situate the materiality of these actants in ways that diffuse the binary of "language" and "nature" and present a postnatural relationality that Bruno Latour describes. Drawing on the recent work of Alain Badiou, Brink explores materialist alternatives to representationalism—including the Lacanian triangle of the imaginary real and symbolic—by emphasizing human-nonhuman …