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Hamilton, Jennifer M
- PublicationHow Brandis plans to insulate the arts sector from the artists
We have very few details of substance regarding the Coalition's recent move to take A$104.7 million from the Australia Council's budget and to set up the National Program for Excellence in the Arts.
What we do know is that the 28 major arts organizations are safe – but that independent artists and the small to medium sector will have to withstand massive changes.
Last week the Australia Council announced that its June funding round would not proceed and that its six year funding program for organisations had been suspended. The ArtStart, Creative Communities Partnerships Initiative and Artists in Residence programs have also been cut.
- PublicationFive Desires, Five DemandsWe propose that feminist studies are particularly well-situated to analyse the paradox of what ‘we humans’ want as we gaze into the eyes of planetary catastrophe. The contributions in the special issue evoke tensions between a capitalist imperative to consume, activist calls for resistance, and queer feminist figurations of sex and longing. Asking in turn what we as editors want from the project of feminist environmental humanities, we respond: (1) we want to spark new relations between desire and demand from within environmental crisis; (2) we want a fulsomely feminist environmental humanities; (3) we want to inhabit the difficult and necessary articulation of ‘feminism’ and ‘environment’; (4) we want multiple, situated, perversely scaled and historically awkward genealogies for environmental humanities; and (5) we want ‘to take up the burden of remaking our world’. We contextualise these demands via a series of examples: the drought and bushfires currently gripping the places we are writing from; Betty Grumble’s performance LOVE AND ANGER; an origin story of feminist environmental humanities as told from our particular perspectives; and a 1943 short story, ‘Dry Spell’, by Australian writer Marjorie Barnard. We argue for the feminist potency of holding desire in tension with demand.
- PublicationTears, Rain, and Shame: King Lear, Masculine Vulnerability, and Environmental Crisis
This series in environmental humanities offers approaches to medieval, early modern, and global pre-industrial cultures from interdisciplinary environmental perspectives. We invite submissions (both monographs and edited collections) in the fields of ecocriticism, specifically ecofeminism and new ecocritical analyses of under-represented literatures" queer ecologies" posthumanism" waste studies" environmental history" environmental archaeology" animal studies and zooarchaeology" landscape studies" 'blue humanities', and studies of environmental / natural disasters and change and their effects on pre-modern cultures.
- PublicationThe Trouble with Babies, Donna Haraway. 2016-Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene Durham: Duke University Press, ISBN 9780822362241
Although Donna Haraway’s new book, Staying with the Trouble, is marketed as a monograph, it is really a collection of essays that many of us will have encountered in other contexts. ‘Sowing Worlds: A Seed Bag for Terraforming with Earth Others’, for instance, first appeared in Beyond the Cyborg: Adventures with Donna Haraway (2013) and has been in my Ecocriticism course reader ever since.1 Likewise, I cite ‘Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin’ from Environmental Humanities in one of my recent journal articles.2 Neither article has been rewritten for this book. Other sections are familiar to me as keynote lectures I have heard in the flesh or listened to online. I begin my review in this somewhat narcissistic way to illustrate my bias—I am very engaged with Haraway’s work—and also to foreshadow my reservations about the success of this volume with specific regard to the central provocation announced in its title, namely the question of ‘making kin’.
- PublicationPretty pinks and dirty yellows: Changing domestic ecologies in the painterly collages of Jahnne Pasco-WhiteHousework is a banal, grubby and non-spectacular aspect of life and economy. But, it is also part of a powerful hierarchical economy that endures relentlessly despite so much opposition and resistance. When housework is considered in relation to persistent and, indeed, accelerating inequity and injustice, it is more interesting and latently spectacular (but no less grubby). In other words, the way we work creates the world, but housework underpins and enables both that work and that world. Such criticism is traditionally called "social reproduction theory" (Bhattacharya, 2017), which looks at how the world keeps on turning and how it is supported by essential undervalued work. Recently however, the idea of "social reproduction" has been challenged by key scholars who seek to look closely at domestic structures but also seek to break out of their hegemonic formations (Haraway, 2016; Lewis, 2020; Cooper, 2017). Rather than just critically describing reproduction, such projects seek to critically recreate the domestic in a different image. In concert with this line of thinking, this chapter examines at subtle remaking of domestic ecologies enacted in Jahnne Pasco-White's painterly collages.
- PublicationGrowing Up Off the Grid(University of Western Sydney, Writing and Society Research Centre, 2021-06-28)I’ve been in therapy for nearly half a decade and I’m only now re-connecting with aspects of myself that I tried to leave behind. Still, now, in my late thirties, I find myself too embarrassed to look back. From where I stand, it is heroic to relive the emotional and physical experience of being teenage again and braver still to write and publish a memoir about it. And so, despite being a teenager clearly in thrall to shame and confusion, Miro Bilbrough’s memoir goes back and fearlessly recounts some of the intense, awkward, difficult and beautiful details that mark her transition to adulthood.
- PublicationThe Future of Housework: The Similarities and Differences Between Making Kin and Making BabiesThis article critiques Donna Haraway's slogan 'make kin not babies' via a reading of her SF tale 'The Camille Stories'. It does so by considering the relationship between the care labour practices involved in making both kin and babies. The article has two central operations. It is an explicitly eco-social feminist argument against the use of making kin as an uncomplicated theoretical standpoint in the environmental humanities. At the same time, it deconstructs the iconic feminist ambit to be liberated from housework. These parallel operations emerge by characterising making kin as a kind of housework, which is a deeply ironic evaluation of Haraway's slogan. Overall the article is a response to the question: how is the work involved in making kin both the same as and different to the labour of making babies? The answer is constructed through the method of literary close reading, paying attention to genre and plot of 'The Camille Stories' alongside Fiona McGregor's novel Indelible Ink [2010. Melbourne: Scribe Publications] and Quinn Eades's all the beginnings: a queer autobiography of the body [2015. Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Publishing]. These comparative readings enable a reckoning with the gnarly and contradictory implications of 'making kin' across contemporary environmental humanities and feminisms.
- PublicationEco-anxiety, Ecological Thought and the Fabulative Turn in Nordic Noir TV: Investigating EcoNoir from the Arctic to the Antipodes(University of New England, 2024-03-28)
; ; ; Turnbull, SueIn the new millennium, humans are increasingly confronted by the dire consequences, both current and predicted, of a changing climate. As the environmental crisis deepens and uncertainty percolates, individual and collective engagement with discomfiting ecological thought is largely unavoidable. The seemingly insoluble quandary has fomented a range of clinically recognised psychological responses which congregate under the umbrella term of eco-anxiety. In this thesis, I investigate the human predisposition to confront and attempt to assuage contemporaneous fears through storytelling on screen. I direct my focus toward the medium of television and the manifestation of this proclivity in the internationally recognised genre of Scandinavian serialised television crime drama known as Nordic Noir. In observing the infiltration of ecological themes and supernatural, folkloric, and Gothic tropes into Nordic Noir productions over the last two decades, I identify the germination and global proliferation of a discrete and replicable sub-genre which, I argue, specifically reflects and responds to the psychological complexities inherent in eco-anxiety. I refer to this novel form of cultural expression as EcoNoir. In EcoNoir crime dramas, I observe that detectives are invariably drawn into cases of murder, missing children and nefarious eco-crimes; however, it is the ways in which these supernaturally charged local stories are told and how their global relevance affectively resonates with viewers, which is at the heart of this thesis.
The confluence of rationality and irrationality in the sub-genre of EcoNoir introduces a narrative ambiguity to the conventions of crime drama which disrupts the cathartic relief from tension that viewers traditionally expect of the form. EcoNoir, like its film noir progenitors, resists definitive resolution and thus, when conflated with environmental themes, authentically reflects the ambiguous nature of the climate crisis and the concomitant uncertainty that stalks the global zeitgeist.
The study reveals a correlation between ecological thought, eco-anxiety and the global human imaginary by tracing the transnational distribution and replication of this fusion of social realism, environmental crime fiction, noir and supernatural fabulation from the Arctic to the Antipodes. Replicating a distinct suite of tropes and conventions, disparately geolocated television creators and practitioners weave local ecological concerns with representations of their own folklore and mythologies to create glocalised productions that reflect the global nature of the climate crisis and respond to universally shared concerns. As producers and purveyors of long-form serialised television, digital streaming platforms facilitate the transmission of complex narratives from culturally specific locations to the wider world: stories that echo our commonalities and foster an appreciation that humans (and non-humans alike) are enmeshed in a shared existential dilemma.
I employ a methodology of close textual analysis and draw on theoretical and scholarly sources in psychology, philosophy, literary and screen studies, environmental humanities, folklore studies, peace studies and gender studies, to examine seven EcoNoir serial television productions as case studies of the sub-genre. These are the German series Dark (2017-2020), the Swedish Jordskott (2016-2017), the French Zone Blanche (Black Spot) (2017-2019), the British Fortitude (2015-2018), the Swedish and French co-production Midnattsol (Midnight Sun) (2016), the Colombian Frontera Verde (Green Frontier) (2019) and the AustralianThe Gloaming (2020-). The analyses will reveal the ways in which the sub-genre of EcoNoir, both cognitively and affectively, reflects the multifarious environmental crises currently unfolding around the planet and the diverse manifestations of eco-anxiety which these crises evoke – from the relatively benign melancholy of solastalgia to the extremes of violent psychosis, by way of narratives ranging from nihilistic defeatism through to tentative optimism and hope.
- PublicationKing LeerTwo worldly problems represented in King Lear are the difficulties of generational change and the associated emotional suffering. Before exploring how this relates to the present historical moment, a quick refresh of the plot is in order.
- PublicationDesk Work: A Novel Idea by Fiona McGregor(University of Western Sydney, Writing and Society Research Centre, 2019-07-12)One morning I listened to Fiona McGregor talk about her writing on a podcast as I washed a dusty pink cashmere sweater I bought from an op shop for five dollars. Although it was before nine and I was still at home, I had started work for the day. Multitasking by doing laundry and listening to a podcast felt legitimate to classify as ‘on the clock’ because of several factors: the time and day of the week (Monday, 8.45am), the match between the manual activity and a key theme in my current research (housework) and, primarily, the direct relationship between the podcast and my task for the morning (drafting this review of McGregor’s A Novel Idea). While a complicated, informal, internal algorithm determined the legitimacy of this action, I felt justified nonetheless. Even if the difference between work and life is only ever one of degree, I won’t tell HR.