TY - JOUR
T1 - Ecopoetic encounters
T2 - unsettling anthropocentric assumptions via constraint-based anthologethnography
AU - Walker, Amelia
AU - Lovell, Bronwyn
AU - Rozitis, Stef
AU - Caldwell, Anne
AU - Callus, Victoria Zoe
AU - Collis, Paul
AU - Crocker, Robert
AU - Disney, Dan
AU - Hill, Jesse
AU - Huen, Antony
AU - Jarrett, Evan
AU - O’Connor, Wanda
AU - Phillips, Georgia Rose
AU - Roberts, Elvire
AU - Roberts, Lilian
AU - Sharman, Ali
AU - Tupper, Devin
AU - Böhm, Carina
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
KW - anthropocene
KW - collaboration
KW - constraint-based poetry
KW - creative writing research
KW - Ecopoetry
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85214267079&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14790726.2024.2427241
DO - 10.1080/14790726.2024.2427241
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85214267079
SN - 1479-0726
VL - 22
SP - 135
EP - 152
JO - New Writing
JF - New Writing
IS - 1
ER -