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Deep Horizons: A Multisensory Archive of Ecological Affects and Prospects
Edited by Brianne Cohen, Erin Espelie, & Bonnie EtheringtonThis multimodal, multisensorial volume pushes the boundaries of scholarship with an experimental, born-digital format that offers a set of responses to collective traumas such as climate change, environmental destruction, and settler colonialism. The artists and authors honor the specificity of real historical and material injustices while also reflecting the eclectic nature of assorted feelings in response to them, working through them in creative and border-crossing ways.
With contributions from Robert Bailey, Nina Elder, Erin Espelie, Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds, Maya Livio, Erika Osborne, Craig Santos Perez, Kim Tallbear, Julianne Warren, and Kyle Powys White.
"The compelling juxtaposition of poetry, music, video, audio, photography, printmaking, and traditional essays is among Deep Horizons' considerable strengths. I don’t know of any other project quite like this one. The subject is timely—indeed, urgent—and the innovative approach to archiving environmental change will interest scholars and artists in a range of disciplines and resonate with a wide audience."
—Jennifer Ladino, University of Idaho
Brianne Cohen is assistant professor of contemporary art history at the University of Colorado Boulder. She is author of Don’t Look Away: Art, Nonviolence, and Preventive Publics in Contemporary Europe (Duke, 2023) and coeditor of the volume The Photofilmic: Entangled Images in Contemporary Art and Visual Culture (Leuven University Press and Cornell University Press, 2016). She has published in journals such as Representations, Art Journal, Afterimage, Third Text, and more.
Erin Espelie is a filmmaker whose works have shown at the New York Film Festival, the British Film Institute, the Whitechapel Gallery, Anthology Film Archive, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and more. She is associate professor in the Department of Cinema Studies & the Moving Image Arts and the Department of Critical Media Practices, and co-founder and co-director of NEST (Nature, Environment, Science & Technology) Studio for the Arts at the University of Colorado Boulder.
Bonnie Etherington is lecturer in literary and creative communication at Te Herenga Waka–Victoria University of Wellington, in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Her scholarly work is forthcoming in Native American and Indigenous Studies (NAIS) and Studies in the Novel, and her novel, The Earth Cries Out (Vintage NZ, 2017), was shortlisted for the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing and long-listed for the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. She was born in Aotearoa and raised in West Papua.
An auto-narrated audiobook is available via the "Download" button above.
- 978-1-943208-56-2 (open access)