“In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays

The spectre of the Anthropocene haunts Kathleen Jamie’s Surfacing (2019). Already appearing in the opening paragraph of the first essay, the term announces the presence of some other time, marking an ambiguous temporality of things past and things yet to come. It is there in the rapidly eroding coas...

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Published in:E-rea
Main Author: SZUBA, Monika
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Laboratoire d’Études et de Recherche sur le Monde Anglophone 2021
Subjects:
art
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/erea/12183
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:revues.org:erea/12183 2023-05-15T15:43:54+02:00 “In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays SZUBA, Monika 2021-06-14 http://journals.openedition.org/erea/12183 undefined unknown Laboratoire d’Études et de Recherche sur le Monde Anglophone E-rea urn:doi:10.4000/erea.12183 http://journals.openedition.org/erea/12183 lic_creative-commons Kathleen Jamie spectralité hantise temporalité perte urgence spectrality haunting temporality loss care emergency art envir Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2021 fttriple https://doi.org/10.4000/erea.12183 2023-01-22T19:21:15Z The spectre of the Anthropocene haunts Kathleen Jamie’s Surfacing (2019). Already appearing in the opening paragraph of the first essay, the term announces the presence of some other time, marking an ambiguous temporality of things past and things yet to come. It is there in the rapidly eroding coastline that, on the one hand, reveals material traces of a long-lost culture, and on the other, disrupts human lives and augurs an imminent threat of cultural discontinuity. Bearing witness to environmental emergency, Jamie avoids solastalgic representations, revealing layers of inapparent meanings. An immediate consequence of climate breakdown epitomised in tundra fires, melting permafrost and rising sea levels, ecosystem distress coalesces with positive social processes as a damaged culture becomes revitalised. The essay focuses on the discussion of the representation of climate crisis, and that which surfaces, or emerges in its wake, and how it effects irreversible change. It proposes to examine Jamie’s depiction of loss and resilience that is both melancholic and hopeful, where grief blends with expectation of renewal, reverberating in the image of the Bering Sea merging with the American continent. Finally, it aims to explore the language of Surfacing, which records environmental emergency and witnesses its consequences to the non-human as well as human world. Cette contribution se penche sur le recueil d’essais de l’Écossaise Kathleen Jamie Surfacing (2019) pour en analyser le traitement de la temporalité, en particulier dans son rapport à la crise environnementale et à la résilience des milieux et des êtres qui les habitent. Article in Journal/Newspaper Bering Sea permafrost Tundra Unknown Bering Sea The Spectre ENVELOPE(-150.167,-150.167,-86.050,-86.050) E-rea 18.2
institution Open Polar
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op_collection_id fttriple
language unknown
topic Kathleen Jamie
spectralité
hantise
temporalité
perte
urgence
spectrality
haunting
temporality
loss
care
emergency
art
envir
spellingShingle Kathleen Jamie
spectralité
hantise
temporalité
perte
urgence
spectrality
haunting
temporality
loss
care
emergency
art
envir
SZUBA, Monika
“In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays
topic_facet Kathleen Jamie
spectralité
hantise
temporalité
perte
urgence
spectrality
haunting
temporality
loss
care
emergency
art
envir
description The spectre of the Anthropocene haunts Kathleen Jamie’s Surfacing (2019). Already appearing in the opening paragraph of the first essay, the term announces the presence of some other time, marking an ambiguous temporality of things past and things yet to come. It is there in the rapidly eroding coastline that, on the one hand, reveals material traces of a long-lost culture, and on the other, disrupts human lives and augurs an imminent threat of cultural discontinuity. Bearing witness to environmental emergency, Jamie avoids solastalgic representations, revealing layers of inapparent meanings. An immediate consequence of climate breakdown epitomised in tundra fires, melting permafrost and rising sea levels, ecosystem distress coalesces with positive social processes as a damaged culture becomes revitalised. The essay focuses on the discussion of the representation of climate crisis, and that which surfaces, or emerges in its wake, and how it effects irreversible change. It proposes to examine Jamie’s depiction of loss and resilience that is both melancholic and hopeful, where grief blends with expectation of renewal, reverberating in the image of the Bering Sea merging with the American continent. Finally, it aims to explore the language of Surfacing, which records environmental emergency and witnesses its consequences to the non-human as well as human world. Cette contribution se penche sur le recueil d’essais de l’Écossaise Kathleen Jamie Surfacing (2019) pour en analyser le traitement de la temporalité, en particulier dans son rapport à la crise environnementale et à la résilience des milieux et des êtres qui les habitent.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author SZUBA, Monika
author_facet SZUBA, Monika
author_sort SZUBA, Monika
title “In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays
title_short “In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays
title_full “In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays
title_fullStr “In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays
title_full_unstemmed “In the early Anthropocene”: Witnessing Environmental Emergency in Kathleen Jamie’s Essays
title_sort “in the early anthropocene”: witnessing environmental emergency in kathleen jamie’s essays
publisher Laboratoire d’Études et de Recherche sur le Monde Anglophone
publishDate 2021
url http://journals.openedition.org/erea/12183
long_lat ENVELOPE(-150.167,-150.167,-86.050,-86.050)
geographic Bering Sea
The Spectre
geographic_facet Bering Sea
The Spectre
genre Bering Sea
permafrost
Tundra
genre_facet Bering Sea
permafrost
Tundra
op_relation urn:doi:10.4000/erea.12183
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op_rights lic_creative-commons
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4000/erea.12183
container_title E-rea
container_issue 18.2
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