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Listening for futures along Birrarung Marr: speculative immersive experience in environmental education

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 20:38 authored by David RousellDavid Rousell, Andreia Penaloza Caicedo
This paper considers experiences of speculative immersion as artists and children map the multilayered sonic ecology of Birrarung Marr, a traditional meeting place for Aboriginal language groups of the Eastern Kulin Nation. We explore how speculative practices of immersion shaped the mapping of precolonial, contemporary, and future soundscapes of Birrarung Marr, and the ceremonial burial of these sonic cartographies for future listeners. Bringing together Indigenous and non-Indigenous concepts of immersion in mutually respectful and purposeful conversation, we work to re-theorise immersive experience as a process of ecological multiplicity and affective resonance, rather than one of phenomenological containment. By approaching immersion as both a concept and a sensation that ruptures the boundary between body and environment, we follow how immersion ‘drifts’ across porous thresholds of sensing, thinking, dreaming, making, and knowing in situated environmental education contexts. In doing so, the paper stresses the importance of speculative immersive experience in cultivating liveable urban futures under conditions of climate change, and responds to the need for new understandings of immersion that take more-than human ecologies of experience into account.

History

Journal

Australian Journal of Environmental Education

Volume

38

Issue

3-4

Start page

431

End page

450

Total pages

20

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Place published

Melbourne

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press.

Former Identifier

2006117113

Esploro creation date

2023-02-09