T. J. Demos
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The politics and aesthetics of climate emergency
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We are living in emergency times, when one person’s emergency can mean another’s oppression; one’s security, another’s erasure; one’s tragedy, another’s economic opportunity. Variously understood, climate change’s visual cultures are particularly complex at a time when they include remote sensing of atmospheric carbon and representations of global warming’s differentiated sociopolitical impacts on the ground, geospatial scientific data, and artistic mediations and activist interventions. The situation is further complicated by the fact that aesthetic practices (referring to the organisation of appearance) have overwhelmed the boundaries of institutionally recognised modes of creativity, now unfolding on the streets and in the digital public sphere in ways that reconfigure and expand conventional artistic approaches, as in new blurrings of art and activism. In its most ambitious and far-reaching sense, art – and more broadly, aesthetic practice – holds the promise of providing insight and inviting perceptual and philosophical shifts in how we comprehend ourselves, the world, and the relations between them. As such, ecocritical analysis, still very much in development as an interdisciplinary formation, must take an expanded approach in considering competing modellings of creative practice if it is to aid in defining and responding to the conflictual emergencies of climate breakdown. Adopting that working hypothesis, this chapter reflects on disparate creative practices – from those of Extinction Rebellion to Decolonize This Place and Forensic Architecture – and the political rifts they occasion, deploying a politico-ecological visual culture and art history, resonating with the larger project of the environmental humanities and embracing a capacious understanding of social-justice-based climate activism.

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Art and knowledge after 1900

Interactions between modern art and thought

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