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Children of an Earth to Come: Speculative Fiction, Geophilosophy and Climate Change Education Research

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 13:20 authored by David RousellDavid Rousell, Amy Cutter-Mackenzie, Jasmyne Foster
Over the last 3 years, the Climate Change and Me project has mapped children and young people's affective, creative, and ontological relationships with climate change through an emergent and child-framed research methodology. The project has involved working with 135 children and young people from across Northern NSW, Australia, as coresearchers responding to the rapidly changing material conditions of the Anthropocene epoch. In this article, we position speculative fiction as a mode of creative research that enabled the young researchers to inhabit possible climate change futures. This node of the Climate Change and Me research was initiated by coauthor Jasmyne, who at the time was a year 7 student at a local high school. Through an ongoing series of visual and textual posts on the project web site, Jasmyne created an alternate world in which children develop mutant forces and bodily augmentations that enable them to resist social and environmental injustices. Drawing on these visual and textual entries in dialogue with Deleuze and Guattari's geophilosophy, we consider ways that speculative fiction might offer new conceptual tools for a viral strain of climate change education that proliferates through aesthetic modes of expression.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1080/00131946.2017.1369086
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 15326993

Journal

Educational Studies: A Journal of the American Educational Studies Association

Volume

53

Issue

6

Start page

654

End page

669

Total pages

16

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2017 American Educational Studies Association

Former Identifier

2006098819

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

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