Micro-Landscapes of the Anthropocene

Restoring agency to the Earth

Acting simultaneously with the decentring of the human in Earth’s ecosystem is the restoration of agency to non-human world. Focusing on the realm of ‘ecodiegesis’ to give voice to the planet, various chapters of the book engage with the idea of semiotic processes existing outside of human language.

The close reading of T.S. Eliot’s “The Dry Salvages” restores agency to the natural world by presenting the possibility of water as a communicative element that interacts not only with humans but with space outside of humans. This way of presenting nature offers a way of envisaging the Earth without the human. A further illustration of this is seen in the short film HEAVE, which beautifully magnifies that which is often unseen: other creature’ and spaces’ ability to act with purpose irrespective of humans.

This absence of humans while witnessing and recognising purposeful acts of nature subsequently subverts human standards of agency. This allows us to challenge normative conceptions of thought and being. While subjects such as water, plants, insects or animals may not demonstrate the same type of formalised processes of rationalisation and communication as humans, they are still able to act with a non-conscious intentionality. In recalling the writings of Michael Marder, we are urged to ‘rethink the notion of thinking’ or we become ignorant to the complex processes of cognition being undertaken. As plants may be able to ‘think’ through their relationship with others, so can other beings.

References:

Marder, Michael, 2013, Plant-thinking: A philosophy of vegetal life, New York: Colombia University Press.

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