Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene

The Anthropocene epoch calls for new narratives which accurately relate the experiences of our times from a diversity of perspectives. As humans make an irreversible impact on the geological record, I suggest that such narratives should engender more democratic and generative sharing of earth with o...

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Main Author: Thomas, Sarah Elizabeth Annie
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Glasgow 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5525/gla.thesis.75133
http://theses.gla.ac.uk/id/eprint/75133
id ftdatacite:10.5525/gla.thesis.75133
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5525/gla.thesis.75133 2023-05-15T15:19:37+02:00 Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene Thomas, Sarah Elizabeth Annie 2019 https://dx.doi.org/10.5525/gla.thesis.75133 http://theses.gla.ac.uk/id/eprint/75133 unknown University of Glasgow Anthropocene, Iceland, Arctic, The North, creative non-fiction, memoir, The Raven's Nest, carrier bag theory of fiction, multi-species, entanglements, women's writing of The North, ethics of memoir. Text Thesis article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5525/gla.thesis.75133 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The Anthropocene epoch calls for new narratives which accurately relate the experiences of our times from a diversity of perspectives. As humans make an irreversible impact on the geological record, I suggest that such narratives should engender more democratic and generative sharing of earth with other life forms – on the page as in life. Drawing upon my own transformative experiences of reciprocal living with human and non-human Others in the remote Westfjords of Iceland, I present a memoir, The Raven’s Nest, as my experiment towards such de-centred and ‘entangled’ writing (Haraway 2016). Covering the period of 2008 – 2014 it includes a variety of instabilities characteristic of the Anthropocene – economic, social, geological, and ecological – in the context of the everyday concerns of a sheep farming and fishing community at sixty-six degrees North. I argue that Anthropocenic narratives should resist a linear trajectory of beginning – middle – end, which is often wrongly conflated with the shape of ‘progress’, and instead find a new shape which can contain the ‘ongoingness’ of life, broken as it is. Drawing on Donna Haraway‘s concept of ‘entanglements’ (2016), and applying Ursula Le Guin’s ‘Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction’ (1989) to memoir, pulled together by Ingold’s ideas about ‘weaving’ as a way of being in the world (2000), I propose a woven, many threaded, container-shape composed of plant, animal and man-made materials: a ‘raven’s nest’. I highlight that the North as an idea – which includes Iceland – has been shaped by masculinist cultural representations which are a legacy of the era of polar exploration and remain dominant. This representation of North as an empty space; a wilderness; an extreme to be conquered or pentrated is in need of revision in our times. In search of an ‘ancestry’ that reflects my own experience of being a woman dwelling in the North and dependent on others for my survival, I find a number of women. From them, I focus on a canon of writers and a film-maker, identifying the tropes they share with my memoir and with each other which might be usefully incorporated into Anthropocenic narratives. Finally, I discuss the ethical implications of entanglement as it manifests in living, and in writing a memoir in the context of the academy. Acknowledging human ‘entanglements’ with other-than-human agents involves acknowledging the impact writing about them might have. This is true for places as much as for people. This thesis explores what happens when place speaks through human stories. Thesis Arctic Iceland DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Anthropocene, Iceland, Arctic, The North, creative non-fiction, memoir, The Raven's Nest, carrier bag theory of fiction, multi-species, entanglements, women's writing of The North, ethics of memoir.
spellingShingle Anthropocene, Iceland, Arctic, The North, creative non-fiction, memoir, The Raven's Nest, carrier bag theory of fiction, multi-species, entanglements, women's writing of The North, ethics of memoir.
Thomas, Sarah Elizabeth Annie
Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene
topic_facet Anthropocene, Iceland, Arctic, The North, creative non-fiction, memoir, The Raven's Nest, carrier bag theory of fiction, multi-species, entanglements, women's writing of The North, ethics of memoir.
description The Anthropocene epoch calls for new narratives which accurately relate the experiences of our times from a diversity of perspectives. As humans make an irreversible impact on the geological record, I suggest that such narratives should engender more democratic and generative sharing of earth with other life forms – on the page as in life. Drawing upon my own transformative experiences of reciprocal living with human and non-human Others in the remote Westfjords of Iceland, I present a memoir, The Raven’s Nest, as my experiment towards such de-centred and ‘entangled’ writing (Haraway 2016). Covering the period of 2008 – 2014 it includes a variety of instabilities characteristic of the Anthropocene – economic, social, geological, and ecological – in the context of the everyday concerns of a sheep farming and fishing community at sixty-six degrees North. I argue that Anthropocenic narratives should resist a linear trajectory of beginning – middle – end, which is often wrongly conflated with the shape of ‘progress’, and instead find a new shape which can contain the ‘ongoingness’ of life, broken as it is. Drawing on Donna Haraway‘s concept of ‘entanglements’ (2016), and applying Ursula Le Guin’s ‘Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction’ (1989) to memoir, pulled together by Ingold’s ideas about ‘weaving’ as a way of being in the world (2000), I propose a woven, many threaded, container-shape composed of plant, animal and man-made materials: a ‘raven’s nest’. I highlight that the North as an idea – which includes Iceland – has been shaped by masculinist cultural representations which are a legacy of the era of polar exploration and remain dominant. This representation of North as an empty space; a wilderness; an extreme to be conquered or pentrated is in need of revision in our times. In search of an ‘ancestry’ that reflects my own experience of being a woman dwelling in the North and dependent on others for my survival, I find a number of women. From them, I focus on a canon of writers and a film-maker, identifying the tropes they share with my memoir and with each other which might be usefully incorporated into Anthropocenic narratives. Finally, I discuss the ethical implications of entanglement as it manifests in living, and in writing a memoir in the context of the academy. Acknowledging human ‘entanglements’ with other-than-human agents involves acknowledging the impact writing about them might have. This is true for places as much as for people. This thesis explores what happens when place speaks through human stories.
format Thesis
author Thomas, Sarah Elizabeth Annie
author_facet Thomas, Sarah Elizabeth Annie
author_sort Thomas, Sarah Elizabeth Annie
title Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene
title_short Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene
title_full Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene
title_fullStr Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene
title_full_unstemmed Making worlds with raven in rural Iceland: entangled memoir for the Anthropocene
title_sort making worlds with raven in rural iceland: entangled memoir for the anthropocene
publisher University of Glasgow
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5525/gla.thesis.75133
http://theses.gla.ac.uk/id/eprint/75133
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Iceland
genre_facet Arctic
Iceland
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5525/gla.thesis.75133
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