Climate Change and the New Polar Aesthetics: Artists Reimagine the Arctic and Antarctic

Climate Change and the New Polar Aesthetics

Artists Reimagine the Arctic and Antarctic
 
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Trade Paperback
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9781478023241
ISBN10:1478023244
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:288 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:476 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 96 illustrations, including 32 in color
561
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Short description:

Lisa E. Bloom considers the way artists, filmmakers, and activists in the Arctic and Antarctic use their art to illustrate our current environmental crises and to reconstruct public understanding of them.

Long description:
In Climate Change and the New Polar Aesthetics, Lisa E. Bloom considers the ways artists, filmmakers, and activists engaged with the Arctic and Antarctic to represent our current environmental crises and reconstruct public understandings of them. Bloom engages feminist, Black, Indigenous, and non-Western perspectives to address the exigencies of the experience of the Anthropocene and its attendant ecosystem failures, rising sea levels, and climate-led migrations. As opposed to mainstream media depictions of climate change that feature apocalyptic spectacles of distant melting ice and desperate polar bears, artists such as Katja Aglert, Subhankar Banerjee, Joyce Campbell, Judit Hersko, Roni Horn, Isaac Julien, Zacharias Kunuk, Connie Samaras, and activist art collectives take a more complex poetic and political approach. In their films and visual and conceptual art, these artists link climate change to its social roots in colonialism and capitalism while challenging the suppression of information about environmental destruction and critiquing Western art institutions for their complicity. Bloom’s examination and contextualization of new polar aesthetics makes environmental degradation more legible while demonstrating that our own political agency is central to imagining and constructing a better world.

“Ever since the publication of Gender on Ice, Lisa E. Bloom has been one of the most innovative scholars in the field of polar aesthetics and the cultural history of the polar regions. Working with an array of creative art practices, Bloom demonstrates how new ways of feeling, seeing, and thinking are integral to the current and future social, environmental, and geopolitical predicament. This is a book for dark times, but it is hopeful, resilient, and socially just.”
Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations  ix
Acknowledgments  xv
Introduction. From the Heroic Sublime to Environments of Global Decline  1
I. Disappearing Landscapes: Feminist, Inuit, and Black Viewpoints
1. Antarctica and the Contemporary Sublime in Intersectional Feminist Art Practices  25
2. Reclaiming the Arctic through Feminist and Black Aesthetic Perspectives  54
3. At Memory's Edge: Collaborative Perspectives on Climate Trauma in Arctic Cinema  85
II. Archives of Knowledge and Loss
4. What is Unseen and Missing in the Circumpolar North: Contemporary Art and Indigenous Collaborative Approaches / Lisa E. Bloom and Elena Glasberg  105
5. Viewers as Citizen Scientists: Archiving Detritus / Lisa E. Bloom and Elena Glasberg 130
III. Climate Art and the Future of Art and Dissent
6. The Logic of Oil and Ice: Reimagining Documentary Cinema in the Capitalocene  153
7. Critical Polar Art Leads to Social Activism: Beyond the Disengaged Gaze  176
Epilogue. Seeing From the Future  195
Notes  201
Filmography  229
Bibliography  235
Index  253