Atmospheric Moon River

These two long poems address both embodied and encultured experiences of climate change in the Kelowna region of the Okanagan Valley and the Salmon Arm region of the Shuswap in the British Columbia southern interior. Both poems grapple with the fear of future-oriented thinking in a time of climate c...

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Main Author: Matthew Rader
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2023-10-01
Series:Canada and Beyond
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/dos/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/29086
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author Matthew Rader
author_facet Matthew Rader
author_sort Matthew Rader
collection DOAJ
description These two long poems address both embodied and encultured experiences of climate change in the Kelowna region of the Okanagan Valley and the Salmon Arm region of the Shuswap in the British Columbia southern interior. Both poems grapple with the fear of future-oriented thinking in a time of climate catastrophe while registering the long historical dimensions that inform that present fear. “Atmospheric Moon River” examines desire and beauty in the context of torrential rain and flooding that resulted in the deaths of several humans and many hundreds of farm animals. The poem updates old questions about the ethics of aesthetics when it comes to suffering in the present environmental context. The poem also draws a line from the first erotic love poem in English to the work of cultural theorists such as Michel Foucault and Judith Butler and “classic” Hollywood cinema.   “Sweet Air” links a story of personal illness and the loss of reproductive potential to the drama and climate anxiety of dramatically unseasonable weather. In “Sweet Air” the interlocutor of the poem has portions of her fallopian tubes removed to protect her from future illness resulting in the loss of an imagined future. That loss plays out against the backdrop of climate uncertainty and the resulting troubling of broader imagined futures.
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spelling doaj.art-b01d313a578540a8865e089dda4430482024-03-18T11:19:05ZengEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaCanada and Beyond2254-11792023-10-011216516710.14201/candb.v12i165-16734547Atmospheric Moon RiverMatthew Rader0University of British ColumbiaThese two long poems address both embodied and encultured experiences of climate change in the Kelowna region of the Okanagan Valley and the Salmon Arm region of the Shuswap in the British Columbia southern interior. Both poems grapple with the fear of future-oriented thinking in a time of climate catastrophe while registering the long historical dimensions that inform that present fear. “Atmospheric Moon River” examines desire and beauty in the context of torrential rain and flooding that resulted in the deaths of several humans and many hundreds of farm animals. The poem updates old questions about the ethics of aesthetics when it comes to suffering in the present environmental context. The poem also draws a line from the first erotic love poem in English to the work of cultural theorists such as Michel Foucault and Judith Butler and “classic” Hollywood cinema.   “Sweet Air” links a story of personal illness and the loss of reproductive potential to the drama and climate anxiety of dramatically unseasonable weather. In “Sweet Air” the interlocutor of the poem has portions of her fallopian tubes removed to protect her from future illness resulting in the loss of an imagined future. That loss plays out against the backdrop of climate uncertainty and the resulting troubling of broader imagined futures.https://revistas.usal.es/dos/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/29086climate changeaestheticsaffectfuturityillnesspoetry
spellingShingle Matthew Rader
Atmospheric Moon River
Canada and Beyond
climate change
aesthetics
affect
futurity
illness
poetry
title Atmospheric Moon River
title_full Atmospheric Moon River
title_fullStr Atmospheric Moon River
title_full_unstemmed Atmospheric Moon River
title_short Atmospheric Moon River
title_sort atmospheric moon river
topic climate change
aesthetics
affect
futurity
illness
poetry
url https://revistas.usal.es/dos/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/29086
work_keys_str_mv AT matthewrader atmosphericmoonriver