Ecopoetic encounters: unsettling anthropocentric assumptions via constraint-based anthologethnography

Amelia Walker, Bronwyn Lovell, Stef Rozitis, Anne Caldwell, Victoria Zoe Callus, Paul Collis, Robert Crocker, Dan Disney, Jesse Hill, Antony Huen, Evan Jarrett, Wanda O’Connor, Georgia Rose Phillips, Elvire Roberts, Lilian Roberts, Ali Sharman, Devin Tupper, Carina Böhm

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The multiform ecological crises of the Anthropocene raise a need to overcome western ideologies of human exceptionalism and anthropocentrism, and to revive multispecies connectivities towards more viable ways of living and learning from beyond-human kin. This article reports on a creative writing research experiment wherein eighteen poets spread across the UK, HKSAR, Korea, and Australia sought to discover and shift our own unwittingly internalised limitations of anthropocentrism via constraint-based ecopoetry and anthologethnography (cultural inquiry via anthologising) Towards this aim, we begin with a discussion of the ecological and ideological problems at hand. We then consider ecopoetry, constraint-based poetry, and anthologethnography. Our discussion of findings relays three key themes: the persistence of anthropocentric thinking despite our attempts to overcome it; the insights gained despite these limitations; and the new problems and questions that arose via our explorations. Ultimately, we note that the specific constraints we used were problematic, but could be revised for future inquiries. We argue for the value in further exploring potentials of constraint-based writing in group situations for practices of inquiry in research and pedagogy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)135-152
Number of pages18
JournalNew Writing
Volume22
Issue number1
Early online date7 Jan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • anthropocene
  • collaboration
  • constraint-based poetry
  • creative writing research
  • Ecopoetry

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