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Erotics and Annihilation: Caitlín R. Kiernan, Queering the Weird, and Challenges to the “Anthropocene”

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Published

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Erotics and Annihilation: Caitlín R. Kiernan, Queering the Weird, and Challenges to the “Anthropocene”. / Wasson, Sara.
Dark Scenes from Damaged Earth: The Gothic Anthropocene. ed. / Justin Edwards; Rune Graulund; Johan Hoglund. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2022.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Harvard

Wasson, S 2022, Erotics and Annihilation: Caitlín R. Kiernan, Queering the Weird, and Challenges to the “Anthropocene”. in J Edwards, R Graulund & J Hoglund (eds), Dark Scenes from Damaged Earth: The Gothic Anthropocene. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis. <https://manifold.umn.edu/read/dark-scenes-from-damaged-earth/section/d7d69a55-9e9e-4dc2-92c6-7b71e1f78a43#ch15>

APA

Vancouver

Wasson S. Erotics and Annihilation: Caitlín R. Kiernan, Queering the Weird, and Challenges to the “Anthropocene”. In Edwards J, Graulund R, Hoglund J, editors, Dark Scenes from Damaged Earth: The Gothic Anthropocene. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. 2022

Author

Wasson, Sara. / Erotics and Annihilation : Caitlín R. Kiernan, Queering the Weird, and Challenges to the “Anthropocene”. Dark Scenes from Damaged Earth: The Gothic Anthropocene. editor / Justin Edwards ; Rune Graulund ; Johan Hoglund. Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 2022.

Bibtex

@inbook{a6b832dcbf3349b58ac88c17bf188aa1,
title = "Erotics and Annihilation: Caitl{\'i}n R. Kiernan, Queering the Weird, and Challenges to the “Anthropocene”",
abstract = "Recently, the {\textquoteleft}weird{\textquoteright} has found multiple points of connection with environmental philosophy and ecocriticism seeking to {\textquoteleft}unsettle the Anthropos of the anthropocene{\textquoteright}. Weird{\textquoteright}s preoccupation with geological spans of {\textquoteleft}deep time{\textquoteright}, the inadequacy of human reason, and the mutual enfleshment of all material being, have been hailed as usefully chiming with core principles emerging in these fields of thought. This essay does not, however, merely wish to re-rehearse these existing arguments; nor do I wish to argue that the weird is always uniquely appropriate for representing a contemporary ecological orientation or perception, and indeed I will call into question some of the ways that Gothic and anthropocene have been combined in critical work to date. Rather, I tease out some specific ways that certain uses of weird may well be valuable in fostering such new noticing in a {\textquoteleft}vivid intimacy{\textquoteright} (as Timothy Morton phrases it), as well as ways in which certain iconic deployments of recent weird may actively obscure some forms of such noticing.This chapter considers how some weird writing not only depicts epistemological disorientation, abject disgust or peaceful coexistence, but also offers a queer and nonreproductive erotics of nonhuman encounter and annihilation. This work may crucial exceed either revulsion or epistemological confusion, as hitherto emphasised in critical responses to the Weird and the Anthropocene. {\textquoteleft}Queering{\textquoteright} a discourse necessarily includes taking account of desire that exceeds heteronormative encounters. In addition, however, queering can include broader, stranger disruptions to hegenomic scripts for desire, and to explore some of these possible trajectories of longing I will draw on the writing of Caitl{\'i}n R. Kiernan. As such, this chapter will explore some of the ways that a weird poetics may simultaneously limit and enrich the {\textquoteleft}arts of noticing{\textquoteright}, while remaining wary of elevating weird to an ideal response. Shudder, slither and strangeness are not always salvation. They are more interesting than that.",
keywords = "Gothic, eco-criticism, the non-human, queer theory, new materialism, speculative realism, science fiction, erotica, open access",
author = "Sara Wasson",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
day = "31",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781517911232",
editor = "Justin Edwards and Rune Graulund and Johan Hoglund",
booktitle = "Dark Scenes from Damaged Earth",
publisher = "University of Minnesota Press",
address = "United States",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Erotics and Annihilation

T2 - Caitlín R. Kiernan, Queering the Weird, and Challenges to the “Anthropocene”

AU - Wasson, Sara

PY - 2022/7/31

Y1 - 2022/7/31

N2 - Recently, the ‘weird’ has found multiple points of connection with environmental philosophy and ecocriticism seeking to ‘unsettle the Anthropos of the anthropocene’. Weird’s preoccupation with geological spans of ‘deep time’, the inadequacy of human reason, and the mutual enfleshment of all material being, have been hailed as usefully chiming with core principles emerging in these fields of thought. This essay does not, however, merely wish to re-rehearse these existing arguments; nor do I wish to argue that the weird is always uniquely appropriate for representing a contemporary ecological orientation or perception, and indeed I will call into question some of the ways that Gothic and anthropocene have been combined in critical work to date. Rather, I tease out some specific ways that certain uses of weird may well be valuable in fostering such new noticing in a ‘vivid intimacy’ (as Timothy Morton phrases it), as well as ways in which certain iconic deployments of recent weird may actively obscure some forms of such noticing.This chapter considers how some weird writing not only depicts epistemological disorientation, abject disgust or peaceful coexistence, but also offers a queer and nonreproductive erotics of nonhuman encounter and annihilation. This work may crucial exceed either revulsion or epistemological confusion, as hitherto emphasised in critical responses to the Weird and the Anthropocene. ‘Queering’ a discourse necessarily includes taking account of desire that exceeds heteronormative encounters. In addition, however, queering can include broader, stranger disruptions to hegenomic scripts for desire, and to explore some of these possible trajectories of longing I will draw on the writing of Caitlín R. Kiernan. As such, this chapter will explore some of the ways that a weird poetics may simultaneously limit and enrich the ‘arts of noticing’, while remaining wary of elevating weird to an ideal response. Shudder, slither and strangeness are not always salvation. They are more interesting than that.

AB - Recently, the ‘weird’ has found multiple points of connection with environmental philosophy and ecocriticism seeking to ‘unsettle the Anthropos of the anthropocene’. Weird’s preoccupation with geological spans of ‘deep time’, the inadequacy of human reason, and the mutual enfleshment of all material being, have been hailed as usefully chiming with core principles emerging in these fields of thought. This essay does not, however, merely wish to re-rehearse these existing arguments; nor do I wish to argue that the weird is always uniquely appropriate for representing a contemporary ecological orientation or perception, and indeed I will call into question some of the ways that Gothic and anthropocene have been combined in critical work to date. Rather, I tease out some specific ways that certain uses of weird may well be valuable in fostering such new noticing in a ‘vivid intimacy’ (as Timothy Morton phrases it), as well as ways in which certain iconic deployments of recent weird may actively obscure some forms of such noticing.This chapter considers how some weird writing not only depicts epistemological disorientation, abject disgust or peaceful coexistence, but also offers a queer and nonreproductive erotics of nonhuman encounter and annihilation. This work may crucial exceed either revulsion or epistemological confusion, as hitherto emphasised in critical responses to the Weird and the Anthropocene. ‘Queering’ a discourse necessarily includes taking account of desire that exceeds heteronormative encounters. In addition, however, queering can include broader, stranger disruptions to hegenomic scripts for desire, and to explore some of these possible trajectories of longing I will draw on the writing of Caitlín R. Kiernan. As such, this chapter will explore some of the ways that a weird poetics may simultaneously limit and enrich the ‘arts of noticing’, while remaining wary of elevating weird to an ideal response. Shudder, slither and strangeness are not always salvation. They are more interesting than that.

KW - Gothic

KW - eco-criticism

KW - the non-human

KW - queer theory

KW - new materialism

KW - speculative realism

KW - science fiction

KW - erotica

KW - open access

M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)

SN - 9781517911232

SN - 9781517911225

BT - Dark Scenes from Damaged Earth

A2 - Edwards, Justin

A2 - Graulund, Rune

A2 - Hoglund, Johan

PB - University of Minnesota Press

CY - Minneapolis

ER -