ISBN13: | 9783031397868 |
ISBN10: | 303139786X |
Binding: | Hardback |
No. of pages: | 293 pages |
Size: | 210x148 mm |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 2 Illustrations, black & white; 39 Illustrations, color |
623 |
Communicating Ice through Popular Art and Aesthetics
EUR 139.09
Click here to subscribe.
Not in stock at Prospero.
"The authors of Communicating Ice tell the stories and stages of ice, showing how its manifold bodies communicate from beyond the schemas of the Western tradition."
-Amanda Boetzkes, University of Guelph, Canada
"With its well-written analyses, new insights and, not least, uplifting visions of new approaches, collaborations and opportunities, this book is a joy to read."
-Kirsten Thisted, University of Copenhagen, Denmark"This book makes a compelling attempt to understand ice not as an object but as an agent with which we must interact differently. Ultimately, the highly recommended volume points to the extreme urgency of political action to curb global warming"
-Evi Zemanek, University of Freiburg, Germany
"This collection brilliantly illustrates how storytelling and aesthetic presentation are crucial aids to understanding and communicating about objects of scientific inquiry. A timely and vital contribution to the environmental humanities, posthumanism and science communication."
- Chris Danta, School of Cybernetics, Australian National University, Australia
This edited collection is the first of its kind to explore the influences and interconnections between artistic and scientific understandings of, and communication around (the melting of) ice. This book investigates and clarifies the ecological and cultural implications of losing ice in the face of climate change ? from glaciers to permafrost valleys, from scientific excursions into ice to its representation in (popular) art and culture. Bringing together diverse perspectives from research and practice across disciplines and media, this volume pioneers research into the cultural power of ice.
?Dr Anne Hemkendreis is a Lecturer (Senior Researcher) in the (SFB 948) Heroes ? Heroizations - Heroism research group at the University of Freiburg (Germany) and a member of the German Young Academy.
Dr Anna-Sophie Jürgens is a Lecturer in Popular Entertainment Studies at the Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science at the Australian National University (ANU) and the Head of Popsicule, ANU's Science in Pop Culture and Entertainment Hub.
PART 1: Staging Ice and Ice Stages in Science, Science Communication and Aesthetic Experience.- 1. Communicating Loss: Ice Research, Popular Art and Aesthetics: Introduction.- 2. Ice Stages and Staging Ice.- 3. Movies on Ice: An ArtSci Perspective on Communicating Antarctic Ice in the Climate Emergency.- 4. Here Be Science Show Dragons: Ice, Icons and Metaphoric Approaches to Climate Change Communication.- PART 2 :Ice Exploration: Heroism, Art and Imaginaries.- 5. Ethnography as Racialised Womanhood in the Arctic Writings of Josephine Diebitsch-Peary.- 6. Materiality of Time: Polar Ice as a Medium for Ecological Art for the Tempered Zones.- 7. Sensing Polar Ice Bodies.- 8. Antarctic Science on the Musical Stage.- 9. Icy Love: Performing Affect and Emotion Feeling About Climate Change.- PART 3: Pop Cultural Meanings of Ice in Visual Fiction and Film.- 10. Frozen Balloons: Aeronautic Heroism and Scientific Knowledge Production.- 11. Hard Ice, Soft Snow? Transnationalism, Spectatorship and the Arctic Sublime in Chasing Ice (2011) and Silent Snow (2011) .- 12. Frozen-Ground Cartoons?Revealing the Invisible Ice.- 13. On the Visual Narratives of Ice in Popular Culture: Comics on Ice, Icy Villains and Ice Science.- 14. Melt for Me: Communicating Ice Empathy Through the Plasticity of Disney.- 15. On the Aesthetic Facets of Ice Urgency: Some Final Reflections.-