Spectacle Earth: Media for Planetary Change

Spectacle Earth: Media for Planetary Change

by Andrew Kalaidjian
Spectacle Earth: Media for Planetary Change

Spectacle Earth: Media for Planetary Change

by Andrew Kalaidjian

eBook

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Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on April 2, 2025

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Overview

Artistic, literary, and technological depictions of the climate crisis and how they influence humanity’s response

What does it mean to watch a disaster unfold? Does exposure to a source of dread spur people to action or lull them into fatalism and complacency? Andrew Kalaidjian takes up these and other vital questions in Spectacle Earth, a lively and wide-ranging consideration of media engagement, passivity, and virtual environments in relation to ecological crises and climate change.

Kalaidjian begins by tracing the long trajectory of environmental aesthetics and natural sciences that have led up to the Anthropocene. He then looks at the lessons learned from artist and activist movements of the 1960s and 1970s before laying out the new challenges in the digital age of artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and virtual reality. The result is groundbreaking, offering readers a new media literacy that goes beyond individual therapeutic experience to provide forms of expression that can lead to the sorts of solidarity and connection needed to change the planet for the better.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813952734
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 04/02/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208

About the Author

Andrew Kalaidjian is Associate Professor of English at California State University, Dominguez Hills, and the author of Exhausted Ecologies: Modernism and Environmental Recovery.

What People are Saying About This

Lisa Swanstrom

An ambitious work that articulates the relationship between media spectacle and anthropogenic climate change as they cohere into what might be termed an aesthetics of the Anthropocene. This is the first book that I am aware of to consider in particular the importance of spectacle to our understanding of this important discourse. Written in a lively, conversational tone, it is wide ranging, vibrant, and evidences the intelligence and knowledge of its author. Spectacle Earth will be of interest to anyone with a curiosity about how it is that we communicate ecological crisis.

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