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Posthuman Plants: Rethinking the Vegetal Through Culture, Art, and Poetry
Contributor(s): Ryan, John Charles (Author)
ISBN: 1612298222     ISBN-13: 9781612298221
Publisher: Common Ground Publishing
OUR PRICE:   $49.50  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: October 2015
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Nature | Plants - General
Dewey: 578.09
LCCN: 2015037122
Physical Information: 0.55" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (0.83 lbs) 242 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Our interdependence with plants entails symbiosis that is not only biological but also cultural, social, and linguistic. Posthuman Plants addresses our diverse entanglements with plants in everyday life through the prisms of posthumanist, multispecies, ecocritical, and ecocultural theory. This volume asks: how does the reconfiguration of human "being" as inherently permeable affect our perceptions of and relationships to plants-those "others" that have been regarded historically as passive elements of the landscape and constructed as the mute foils of animality? This book contributes to the ever-increasing debate about how we perceive plants and their influence on what it means to be human, more-than-human, and other-than-human. It argues that reconceptualizing the botanical world requires seeing, feeling, and understanding plants as intelligent, active, and sentient agents. Posthuman Plants is divided into five sections: Affect and Reciprocity, Heritage and Digitality, Art and Vegetality, Poetry and Vegetality, and Plants and the Senses. Although some of its content is strongly focused on the vegetal life of the southwest of Australia where the author resides, other countries, bioregions, places, and contexts figure into the analysis. The chapters are presented as essays on diverse subjects, all organized around the common strand of rethinking plants through culture, art, and poetry. In re-imagining the vegetal, Posthuman Plants draws from ethnographic, auto-ethnographic, historical, and literary sources and develops plant-based theoretical models that blur disciplinary boundaries. This broadly-ranging work will be of interest to international audiences, especially researchers in the fields of environmental studies and ecological humanities.