The (Anthropocene) Obscene | UniSC | University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia

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The (Anthropocene) Obscene

Why did we undertake this study?

Coastal communities are undergoing unprecedented social and ecological change. While quantitative measures provide evidence of the rate and magnitude of these changes, fewer studies offer qualitative accounts from the perspective of those tasked with responding to impacts. This study sought to offer authentic, affective representations of rapidly changing and diverging coastal regions through the voices of those on the frontlines of socio-ecological change.

How was it done?

Participant-voiced poems were generated through over 65 semi-structured interviews with coastal decision-makers (e.g., local and state government employees) and community representatives (e.g., government and non-government service providers) in Australia’s fastest growing coastal regions. The poems were used to convey the uncertainties and devastation arising across increasingly unequal coastal communities. The nationwide study included cases from each coastal Australian State and Territory.

What did we find?

Implications

Qualitative studies that share the impacts of socio-ecological change through the direct voices of those on the front lines of response provide a powerful and necessary contribution to a field dominated by quantitative and summary accounts. Poetic inquiry is one method, among many, that can viscerally represent the lived experiences of increasingly vulnerable contexts. This study reveals that life in the Anthropocene is distinguished by intensifying inequalities and is more accurately termed the Obscene. This demands a renewed focus towards structural changes that comprehensively support equity across all dimensions of socio-ecological systems.

Learn more

The full paper is available from: https://rgs-ibg.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/geoj.12559

Citation: Thomsen D, Smith T, Elrick-Barr C (2023). The Anthropocene Obscene: Poetic inquiry and evocative evidence of inequality, The Geographical Journal.

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Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the Australian Government through the Australian Research Council Discovery Projects Funding Scheme (Project FT180100652). This work contributes to Future Earth Coasts, a Global Research Project of Future Earth. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of the Australian Government, Australian Research Council or Future Earth Coasts.