Micro-Landscapes of the Anthropocene

Earth as marked by connection and convergence

Many of our worlds respond to anthropocentrism by seeking to interrogate the binary between human and non-human. Instead, they offer to emphasise connection, co-dependency and intra-action. Most prominently, Marginal Worlds, which explores the beauty of liminality, poignantly displaces that distinctive separation is fallacious.

The Marginal Worlds photo essay explores spaces where humans and nature meet not only meet, but blend and transform each other. In line with new materialist theory, each marginal space is marked by the inseparability of many parts, which have become one through physical and social interaction: a natureculture space.

This porosity of being may also be seen through in Watery Worlds: Discovering the Equirium; the discussion of the earth’s membrane; and the close reading of Ray Bradbury’s A Sound of Thunder. Each of the sections demonstrate that convergence and connection is not limited to place and physicality, but also time.

Nature touches and remembers all of us – all our ancestors and our future families. We are connected by blood, places, and nourishment which is a form of nature, for natural time is not linear.

- Marginal Worlds

References:

Haraway, Donna 2007, When Species Meet, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

This page has paths:

This page is referenced by:

This page references: