In this month's episode, we spoke with Sarah Dimick about her new book Unseasonable: Climate Change in Global Literatures. It connects literature and the environment through an idea of seasonality and rhythm. Climate change can be understood as a time of unseasonableness, of environmental events and cycles being outside normal rhythms of time. Living today is defined by this arrhythmia, and Sarah charts new territory in studying literature for its reflections of this cyclicality, what she calls literary phenology.
For more from Sarah Dimick:
Email: sarah.dimick@northwestern.edu
ASLE EcoCast:
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- Twitter: @ASLE_EcoCast
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- Alex Tischer: @ak_tischer
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Episode recorded January 30, 2025
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0