Re-membering oceans, bodies, rhythms and breath: a collective reflection on life/work as we walk-write from different shorelines

IF 0.4 0 LITERATURE
Amelia Walker, D. Wain, Alissa Black, Elena Spasovska
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper is a collaborative reflection by four academic women using our creative writings about oceans and shorelines to think and reflect. We write from discrete locations along the Southern and Eastern coastlines of the invaded continent contemporarily known as Australia. Our methodology incorporates walking and creative writing. This walking-writing methodology has connected us to entangled feelings and lived experiences, including our embodied relationships with the ocean, our work in academia, and our rising levels of anxiety as climate change and related environmental crises coincide with our re-membering of oceans, bodies, rhythms and breath. To illustrate our re-membering, we intersperse fragments from our creative writing with reflective discussion. The social, environmental and political chaos surrounding us seeps into our processes, highlighting how neoliberal ideologies influence our inability to dis/connect, harming both human and beyond-human life. Through walking-writing, we seek to remember what we are losing and to imagine alternative futures.
重新记忆海洋、身体、节奏和呼吸:当我们从不同的海岸线行走时,对生活/工作的集体反思
摘要本文是四位学术女性的合作反思,她们利用我们关于海洋和海岸线的创造性著作进行思考和反思。我们在被入侵的澳大利亚大陆南部和东部海岸线的离散地点写作。我们的方法包括步行和创造性写作。这种行走的写作方法将我们与纠缠的情感和生活经历联系在一起,包括我们与海洋的具体关系、我们在学术界的工作,以及随着气候变化和相关的环境危机与我们对海洋、身体、节奏和呼吸的重新认识相吻合,我们的焦虑程度不断上升。为了说明我们的记忆,我们将创造性写作的片段与反思性讨论穿插在一起。我们周围的社会、环境和政治混乱渗透到我们的过程中,突显出新自由主义意识形态如何影响我们的分离/联系能力,伤害人类和人类以外的生活。通过步行写作,我们试图记住我们正在失去的东西,并想象其他的未来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
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