to star items.

Accepted Paper

Reimagining Ecoanxiety in an Age of Planetary Dysruption: For an Anthropology of Environ-Mental Health   
Angela Marques Filipe (Durham University)

Send message to Author

Paper short abstract

Paper long abstract

The last decade has seen a planetary turn in social and political theory (Clark and Szerszynski 2020, Hui 2024) and in global governance as expressed in planetary health agendas. These agendas have documented the complex ecological and existential threats posed by the anthropogenic triple crisis of climate change and extreme weather, toxic pollution and exposure, and biodiversity and habitat loss/damage, as well as intersections between climate and mental health crises as epitomised by the high prevalence of ecoanxiety. Despite this, comparatively less attention has been given to what an anthropology of ecoanxiety and environ-mental health would look like, in times of planetary disruption. This paper addresses this gap precisely by proposing such an agenda, which would bring health and environmental humanities and ecological and planetary thought into conversation, and by sharing initial findings from my study on ecoanxiety. As such, this paper asks three interrelated questions: if living in an age of planetary dysruption affects virtually every aspect of life, what are these “affects” and emerging climate anxieties made – and capable – of? How do they shape horizons of possibility and experiences of ontological vulnerability (Filipe et al. 2021, Ford et al. 2024)? And, more broadly, how might we pivot the anthropological interest in thinking beyond binaries of body and mind, organism and environment, to reimagine the relations between planetary thinking and earth emotions (Albrecht 2019, Sasser 2023)?

Panel P052
Bodies and health in a changing climate
  Session 2