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Description

Featuring contributions from key names in the field alongside some of the most exciting new voices, this collection presents cutting-edge work on species extinction from a wide variety of perspectives across the environmental humanities.

Biodiversity loss threatens to transform the ecological foundations of all biological life on the planet, yet solutions to this crisis are fiercely contested. This book addresses extinction – along with climate change, the most urgent environmental crisis of the twenty-first century - by exploring species decline and conservation with a particular emphasis on divergent cultural framings, temporal scales, and media.

Contributors explore what ethical guidelines underlie acceptable and unacceptable ways of interacting with plants and animals, what social, aesthetic, and affective perceptions and meanings are attributed to particular species, how human-nonhuman relations are construed as part of a particular social order and which species are considered worth conserving, and at what cost.

Drawing on the disciplines of anthropology, gender studies, cultural geography, environmental history, philosophy, literary studies, media studies, and studies of religion, this book explores how the engagement with biodiversity loss challenges basic assumptions in these disciplines and opens up new avenues of thought and activism for shaping the multispecies communities of the future.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Roman Bartosch (University of Cologne, Germany), Ursula Heise (UCLA, USA) Kate Rigby (University of Cologne, Germany)
Section 1: Unsettling Histories
1. Our Ancestors' Dystopia Now: Indigenous conservation and the Anthropocene Kyle Powys White (University of Michigan, USA)
2. Military Snails: Multispecies Solidarities in Hawai'i Thom van Dooren (University of Sydney, Australia)
3. Extinction as Cultural Heritage: The Dodo and the Turtle Dolly Jørgensen (University of Stavanger, Norway)
Section 2: Unsettling Narratives
4. Extinction and Experience in Digital Eco-Games Roman Bartosch (University of Cologne, Germany), and Julia Hoydis (University of Graz, Austria)
5. Coextinction? The Southern Resident Killer Whales in Culture and Science Greg Garrard (UBC Okanagan, Canada)
6. Will Revery Alone Do? A (Mono)cultural Narrative of Bee Decline Eline Tabak (University of Oulu, Finland)
Section 3: Unsettling Boundaries
7. Speaking in Spores: Extinction and the Fungal Imaginary Sicily Fiennes, Graham Huggan, Stefan Skrimshire, and Serena Turton-Hughes (University of Leeds, UK)
8. Multispecies Influenza: An Environmental Humanities Approach to Zoonotic Disease Natasha Fijn (The Australian National University, Australia)
9. Animal domestication, genealogies of exile, and the long Anthropocene Linda Williams (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Australia)
Section 4: Unsettling Ethics
10. 'Bees for Peace': Pollinators, Plants and Places of Worship Carrie Dohe and Kate Rigby (University of Cologne, Germany)
11. Detectives on an Alien Planet: Distant Pasts, Mass Extinctions, and Speculative Futures Ursula Heise (UCLA, USA)
12. Should Humanity Live Forever? Human Extinction and Biodiacritics Ted Toadvine (Pennsylvania State University, USA)
Afterword
Richard Kerridge (Bath Spa University, UK)

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published 19 May 2026
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 256
ISBN 9781350598492
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Series Global Challenges in the Environmental Humanities
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Roman Bartosch

Roman Bartosch is Full Professor of Teaching Anglo…

Anthology Editor

Ursula K. Heise

Ursula K. Heise holds the Marcia H. Howard Term Ch…

Anthology Editor

Kate Rigby

Kate Rigby is Alexander von Humboldt Professor of…

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