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Weirding Landscapes
Details
This open access book investigates human-environment relations in the context of the anthropocenic Arctic. Through an archaeological and anthropological study of landscape, it wields weirding a creative mode of engagement with the world as a means of coming to terms with the stranger, experiential dimensions of a planet populated by diverse non-human entities often bearing monstrous characteristics. Such entities are exemplified by climate change itself, at once human-induced and a force of its own volition that maintains an elusive presence as a co-inhabitant of the Anthropocene. The book focuses on the landscape of Ritniohkka, a fjell in Sápmi, Finnish Lapland. Ritniohkka is erstwhile home to a diminutive glacier, whose weird, anomalous characteristics crowned the fjell until it several years ago melted into history. Taking a broadly autoethnographic approach, it considers perceptions of, and affective experiences in, this rough and relatively remote, otherworldly environment, discussing diverse ways of encountering and relating to the Arctic in the context of scientific fieldwork.
This book is open access, which means that you have free and unlimited access A novel experimental volume that spans topics of landscape, history, archaeology, anthropology, and mind An exploratory assessment of a multitude of human and non-human aspects and attachments to the remote Arctic A unique interdisciplinary approach to Northern landscapes that speaks to multiple backgrounds and approaches
Autorentext
Vesa-Pekka Herva is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Oulu, Finland. His research focuses on the perceptions and experiences of the European High North.
Aki Hakonen, PhD, is an archaeologist and a fledgling science writer. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oulu.
Roger Norum is Academy Fellow and Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Oulu. His research across the Arctic and South/Southeast Asia focuses on mobility, infrastructure, and sociality in human-environment relations.
Oula Seitsonen, Sakarin-Pentin Ilarin Oula, PhD, is Academy Fellow at the University of Oulu. Geographer and archaeologist by training, his research ranges from Stone Age East Africa to Arctic conflict heritage.
Markus Fjellström is a postdoctoral researcher in Archaeology at Lund University where he studies Late Paleolithic and Early Mesolithic reindeer mobility in southern Scandinavia using stable isotope and aDNA analysis.
Klappentext
This open access book investigates human-environment relations in the context of the anthropocenic Arctic. Through an archaeological and anthropological study of landscape, it wields weirding a creative mode of engagement with the world as a means of coming to terms with the stranger, experiential dimensions of a planet populated by diverse non-human entities often bearing monstrous characteristics. Such entities are exemplified by climate change itself, at once human-induced and a force of its own volition that maintains an elusive presence as a co-inhabitant of the Anthropocene. The book focuses on the landscape of Ritniohkka, a fjell in Sápmi, Finnish Lapland. Ritniohkka is erstwhile home to a diminutive glacier, whose weird, anomalous characteristics crowned the fjell until it several years ago melted into history. Taking a broadly autoethnographic approach, it considers perceptions of, and affective experiences in, this rough and relatively remote, otherworldly environment, discussing diverse ways of encountering and relating to the Arctic in the context of scientific fieldwork.
Vesa-Pekka Herva is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Oulu, Finland. His research focuses on the perceptions and experiences of the European High North.
Aki Hakonen, PhD, is an archaeologist and a fledgling science writer. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oulu.
Roger Norum is Academy Fellow and Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Oulu. His research across the Arctic and South/Southeast Asia focuses on mobility, infrastructure, and sociality in human-environment relations.
Oula Seitsonen, Sakarin-Pentin Ilarin Oula, PhD, is Academy Fellow at the University of Oulu. Geographer and archaeologist by training, his research ranges from Stone Age East Africa to Arctic conflict heritage.
Markus Fjellström is a postdoctoral researcher in Archaeology at Lund University where he studies Late Paleolithic and Early Mesolithic reindeer mobility in southern Scandinavia using stable isotope and aDNA analysis.
Inhalt
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Weirding and Fielding the World: Hows and Whys.- Chapter 3. The Glacier .- Chapter 4. Mountain Beings.- Chapter 5. At the Basecamp.- Chapter 6. The Fjell in the Cloud.- Chapter 7. Gear Shift: Hiking and Being in the North.- Chapter 8. Conclusion: Monstrous Worlds.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783031850158
- Anzahl Seiten 200
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Genre Earth Science
- Herausgeber Springer Nature Switzerland
- Größe H210mm x B148mm
- Jahr 2025
- EAN 9783031850158
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-3-031-85015-8
- Veröffentlichung 29.03.2025
- Titel Weirding Landscapes
- Autor Vesa-Pekka Herva , Aki Hakonen , Roger Norum , Oula Seitsonen , Markus Fjellström
- Untertitel Arctic Glacier Extinction and Monsters of the Anthropocene
- Sprache Englisch