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Anthropocene and Visual Culture in Australia [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 360 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 1 Line drawings, color; 67 Halftones, color; 68 Illustrations, color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Jul-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032997729
  • ISBN-13: 9781032997728
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 360 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 1 Line drawings, color; 67 Halftones, color; 68 Illustrations, color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Jul-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032997729
  • ISBN-13: 9781032997728
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Australia is gaining a reputation as the proverbial canary in the coal mine of global environmental change. The driest inhabited continent on earth, Australia is now exposed to rising planetary temperatures and an increase in disastrous events such as massive bushfires, floods and warming oceans. At the same time, urban development, extractive agriculture and mining, are eroding Australia’s distinctive natural habitats, driving its mammal extinctions to the highest rates in the world.

This edited collection features writers from various fields in visual culture, history and ecocritical theory who give timely accounts of how Australian visual media represents, interprets, predicts, or obscures such environmental events in relation to the Anthropocene. The chapters focus on the visualisation of Australian ecology across a range of media including ancient rock art, television and film, photography, visual art, digital maps, and AI.


By bringing Australian critical perspectives to the challenges of the Anthropocene, this book offers a new environmental approach to Australian culture in the context of the global issues of climate change, extinction, and colonialism.



This edited collection features writers from various fields in visual culture, history and ecocritical theory who give timely accounts of how Australian visual media represents, interprets, predicts, or obscures such environmental events in relation to the Anthropocene.

Arvustused

This in all senses timely collection offers a sustained, material and critical engagement with visualizing the Anthropocene in the key context of Australia. When governments are saying there's nothing to see here, this collective project amounts to a substantial rebuttal that researchers everywhere will want to study. Nicholas Mirzoeff, Professor, Department of Media, Culture and Communication, NYUWilliams and McDonald's outstanding collection of essays delivers a sweeping as well as meticulously detailed account of Australian visual culture in its engagement with the environmental crises that are often summarized as "the Anthropocene." In its emphasis on visual production from murals and paintings all the way to photographs, television, film, and digital imagery, this book shifts the emphasis of the Environmental Humanities from history, philosophy, and literature to visual cultures. Even as the essays integrate visual works with global theoretical perspectives on the Anthropocene, they foreground the specificity of Australian experiences of environmental crisis, bringing together analyses of the "imperial visuality" of colonialism and of the "counter-visualities" that have emerged from First Nations visual expression as well as activist environmental image-making. The interdisciplinary spectrum of disciplines in the volume, which includes First Nations scholars as well as experts from art history, film studies, and urban studies, turns Williams and McDonald's collection into a distinctive, innovative, and important contribution to the expanding field of the Environmental Humanities. Ursula K. Heise, Distinguished Professor | Department of English & Institute of the Environment & Sustainability, UCLACombining diverse perspectives, including contributions by historians and anthropologists, geographers and urban planners, artists and curators, as well as scholars of visual media, science and technology this volume affords fresh insights into many aspects of Australian visual culture, both Indigenous and settler-colonial, from thehorizon of those earth system changes summoned (not unproblematically) by the term Anthropocene: an era dated by some to the start of the fossil-fuelled industrial revolution and hence roughly coeval with the British invasion of the continent they dubbed Australia. The first major anthology to examine the history of Australian visual culture across a wide range of media through an ecological lens, this fascinating collection also makes a major contribution to the inter- and transdisciplinary weave of the environmental humanities through its focus on the hitherto under-acknowledged role of visual culture in shaping human perceptions of, and interactions with, other-than-human beings and phenomena, and the more-than-human worlds that, for better or worse, we co-create with them. Kate Rigby, Alexander von Humboldt Professor of Environmental Humanities, University of CologneThis anthology brings to life different ecological imaginaries, invoked as Australians from rock-engravers to painters, photographers, and film-makerslisten to and reconfigure the dialogue between nature and culture. Without flattening the world into a posthumanist tableau, this book carefully elaborates how, intentionally and by inference, different lines of visual cuture expose the meaning of human impact on our distressed planet. Paul James, Emeritus Professor of Globalization and Cultural Diversity, Western Sydney UniversityMany of Australias best thinkers assemble to think about the myriad aspects of visual culture on a continent where the challenges of the Anthropoceneexcessive extraction, fire, and drought among themare a fact of everyday life. Deftly introduced by Williams and McDonald, contributions explore First Peoples conceptions of Country, anthropological understandings of deep time, the persistence of colonial frameworks in art and popular culture consciousness, and the growing fear of extinction, both natural and human. Eschewing redemptive gestures, these essays map where we are now, visualising these challenges in contemporary conditions. Terry Smith, Emeritus Professor University of Sydney, Andrew W. Mellon Emeritus Professor of Contemporary Art History and Theory, University of Pittsburgh, & Slade Professor of Fine Arts, University of Cambridge, 2025-2026

1. Visualising the Anthropocene in Australia SECTION I: ENVISIONING
COUNTRY
2. First Peoples Visual Culture, Country, and the Anthropocene.
Visualising Deep Time: Australian Rock Art, Television and Climate Change
4.
Film and Television in the New Age of Fire SECTION II: COLONIAL IMAGERY
5.
Presentism and Anthropocenic Unawareness in Early Western Australian Settler
Art: The Case of Thomas Turner
6. True History of the Kelly Gang: Shame and
Regret- Nostalgia and Anthropocene Aesthetics
7. An Ecological Aesthetic:
Kant after Tillers in the Enlightenment to Come SECTION III: WITNESSING
EXTINCTION
8. Extinction Imaginaries in Australian Art
9. Animals and the
Anthropocene: Saltwater Crocodiles, Malcom Douglas and Australian Television
10. Lifes too short: imagining oceans past, rejecting tuna futures
11.
Street Art and Extinction in Cities: intersections between extinction art and
shadow places SECTION IV: REFRAMING THE LAND
12. Australian Photography in
the Anthropocene
13. Revisioning Regional Australia
14. Attention is All You
Want: Machinic Gaze and the Anthropocene
15. Australian Exhibitions and
Museums responding to the Anthropocene
Linda Williams is a cultural historian and emeritus professor of RMIT University. She has published widely on histories of human-animal relations and western concepts of nature and curated several international exhibitions on climate change and multispecies imaginaries. She led an Australian Research Council (ARC) funded Project Spatial Dialogues: Public Art & Climate Change which produced the co-authored book Screen Ecologies: Art, Screen Culture and the Environment in the Asia-Pacific Region (MIT Press, 2016). She currently leads the Extinction Imaginaries: Mapping Affective Visual Cultures in Australasia ARC project with Saffron Aid and Greenpeace https://circlesofextinction.org/.

Helen McDonald is an art historian and curator, and an Honorary Fellow at the University of Melbourne. Her books are Erotic Ambiguities: The Female Nude in Art (Routledge, 2001) and Patricia Piccinini: Nearly Beloved (Piper Press, 2012). Her recent co-edited book is Crosscurrents in Australian First Nations and Non-Indigenous Art (Routledge, 2023) and her latest co-edited journal special issue is Australian Art and its Aboriginal Histories, Australian Historical Studies (Special Issue) 2023. Her current research interests are rock art and climate change in a global context.