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Can Art Help Our Climate Anxiety?

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Manage episode 376980104 series 2576514
Content provided by Monash University. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Monash University or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

15 September 2023
What Happens Next?
Can Art Help Our Climate Anxiety? | 85


New this season: Subscribe to Monash’s YouTube channel to watch the video version of each full episode.


In the third episode of our exploration of climate anxiety, host Dr Susan Carland explores the shared experience of climate anxiety and how art can be used to reach the core of human emotions. Our expert guests create and study music and fiction that can evoke empathy and foster a sense of community among audiences who may be grappling with climate anxiety.

Dr Anna McMichael and Dr Louise Devenish, from Monash University's Sir Zelman Cowan School of Music and Performing Arts, introduce “Climate Notes”. This unique project combines letters from climate scientists and ordinary people, which discuss how climate change makes them feel, with original musical compositions. These “musical letters” provide a moving outlet for expressing the emotional and psychological impacts of climate change.

The episode also features literary scholar Professor Adeline Johns-Putra, head of the School of Arts and Social Sciences at Monash University Malaysia, who specialises in climate fiction, or “cli-fi.” Climate fiction includes novels, stories, and films that grapple with the impact of climate change on our world. These narratives can serve as a powerful tool for processing the emotional toll of climate anxiety, offering readers a chance to explore various perspectives on climate change and its consequences, fostering empathy and awareness.

Don’t miss a moment of Season 8 of “What Happens Next?” – subscribe now on your favourite podcast app.

Already a subscriber? You can help other listeners find the show by giving “What Happens Next?” a rating and review.

A full transcript of this episode is available on Monash Lens.

Learn more:

“What Happens Next?” will be back next week with an all-new topic.

If you’re enjoying the show, don’t forget to subscribe, or rate or review “What Happens Next?” to help listeners like yourself discover it.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  continue reading

100 episodes

Artwork

Can Art Help Our Climate Anxiety?

What Happens Next?

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published

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Manage episode 376980104 series 2576514
Content provided by Monash University. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Monash University or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

15 September 2023
What Happens Next?
Can Art Help Our Climate Anxiety? | 85


New this season: Subscribe to Monash’s YouTube channel to watch the video version of each full episode.


In the third episode of our exploration of climate anxiety, host Dr Susan Carland explores the shared experience of climate anxiety and how art can be used to reach the core of human emotions. Our expert guests create and study music and fiction that can evoke empathy and foster a sense of community among audiences who may be grappling with climate anxiety.

Dr Anna McMichael and Dr Louise Devenish, from Monash University's Sir Zelman Cowan School of Music and Performing Arts, introduce “Climate Notes”. This unique project combines letters from climate scientists and ordinary people, which discuss how climate change makes them feel, with original musical compositions. These “musical letters” provide a moving outlet for expressing the emotional and psychological impacts of climate change.

The episode also features literary scholar Professor Adeline Johns-Putra, head of the School of Arts and Social Sciences at Monash University Malaysia, who specialises in climate fiction, or “cli-fi.” Climate fiction includes novels, stories, and films that grapple with the impact of climate change on our world. These narratives can serve as a powerful tool for processing the emotional toll of climate anxiety, offering readers a chance to explore various perspectives on climate change and its consequences, fostering empathy and awareness.

Don’t miss a moment of Season 8 of “What Happens Next?” – subscribe now on your favourite podcast app.

Already a subscriber? You can help other listeners find the show by giving “What Happens Next?” a rating and review.

A full transcript of this episode is available on Monash Lens.

Learn more:

“What Happens Next?” will be back next week with an all-new topic.

If you’re enjoying the show, don’t forget to subscribe, or rate or review “What Happens Next?” to help listeners like yourself discover it.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  continue reading

100 episodes

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