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Bearing worlds: learning to live-with climate change

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:13 authored by Blanche Verlie
This paper explores the emotional experiences of some undergraduate sustainability students in a semester long course on climate change. Specifically, it attends to experiences of anxiety, frustration, overwhelm, guilt, grief and hope. I suggest these experiences are characteristic of a process I term learning to live-with climate change. Learning to live-with climate change involves attuning to the relational composition of the world and thus the self; mourning desirable relationships that are lost as the planet warms; and responding to these conditions in ways that may foster more liveable worlds. Collectively, these processes enrol people in practices of bearing worlds: enduring the pain of the end of the world they have known, and labouring to generate promising alternatives. As such, these processes reconfigure the self and its relations, and attunement to how climate change composes, recomposes and decomposes particular subjectivities is important. The paper argues that affective adaptation is therefore a crucial element of climate change education.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1080/13504622.2019.1637823
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 13504622

Journal

Environmental Education Research

Volume

25

Issue

5

Start page

751

End page

766

Total pages

16

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Former Identifier

2006094557

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-12-02

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