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Storying with Groundwater single work   criticism  
Issue Details: First known date: 2020... 2020 Storying with Groundwater
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'Subterranean waters enable life. Humans, non-human animals and enmeshed ecosystems of more-than-human entities, such as river and creek sides, mound springs and swamps, interact with groundwater in a myriad of complex relationships. Hundreds of Australian inland towns and communities rely on bore water. Population counts of people dependent on aquifers across Australia, on the Asian and African continents, in the Middle East and across the Americas reach into the billions. Despite this, there are few literary expressions of groundwater’s potency and vulnerability in the Australian imaginary (Wardle). This essay draws upon fictional portrayals of groundwater from the climate fiction manuscript, Why We Cry (Wardle), to suggest the ways that climate fiction might make a small shift from the ‘derangement’ of blindness to subterranean places through the novel’s endeavours to osmotically affect readers.' (Introduction)

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Swamphen : A Journal of Cultural Ecology no. 7 2020 19140936 2020 periodical issue 'Swamphen emerges from the air, lands and seas that form the stories of the First Nation peoples of Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand. We attend to these communities’ narratives as a first principle. We acknowledge the unceded territories on which we have worked, to produce this issue of Swamphen, and we pay our respects to those territories’ Elders, past, present and emerging. This respect is imbued in our namesake, swamphen, a bird active in this region’s ground, skies and waters.' (Grounding Story Swamphen Collective, introduction) 2020
Last amended 28 Apr 2020 10:35:41
Storying with Groundwatersmall AustLit logo Swamphen : A Journal of Cultural Ecology
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