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General Discussion >> General Board >> Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
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Message started by Laugh till you cry on May 17th, 2016 at 1:05pm

Title: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by Laugh till you cry on May 17th, 2016 at 1:05pm
The concurrency and intersection of greed, climate change, desertification, pollution and other misdeeds. The era of the Anthropocene.

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/apr/01/generation-anthropocene-altered-planet-for-ever


Quote:
In 2003 the Australian philosopher Glenn Albrecht coined the term solastalgia to mean a “form of psychic or existential distress caused by environmental change”. Albrecht was studying the effects of long-term drought and large-scale mining activity on communities in New South Wales, when he realised that no word existed to describe the unhappiness of people whose landscapes were being transformed about them by forces beyond their control. He proposed his new term to describe this distinctive kind of homesickness.

Where the pain of nostalgia arises from moving away, the pain of solastalgia arises from staying put. Where the pain of nostalgia can be mitigated by return, the pain of solastalgia tends to be irreversible. Solastalgia is not a malady specific to the present – we might think of John Clare as a solastalgic poet, witnessing his native Northamptonshire countryside disrupted by enclosure in the 1810s – but it has flourished recently. “A worldwide increase in ecosystem distress syndromes,” wrote Albrecht, is “matched by a corresponding increase in human distress syndromes”. Solastalgia speaks of a modern uncanny, in which a familiar place is rendered unrecognisable by climate change or corporate action: the home become suddenly unhomely around its inhabitants.

Albrecht’s coinage is part of an emerging lexis for what we are increasingly calling the “Anthropocene”: the new epoch of geological time in which human activity is considered such a powerful influence on the environment, climate and ecology of the planet that it will leave a long-term signature in the strata record. And what a signature it will be. We have bored 50m kilometres of holes in our search for oil. We remove mountain tops to get at the coal they contain. The oceans dance with billions of tiny plastic beads. Weaponry tests have dispersed artificial radionuclides globally. The burning of rainforests for monoculture production sends out killing smog-palls that settle into the sediment across entire countries. We have become titanic geological agents, our legacy legible for millennia to come.


Australia rainfall decline and drought:

http://www.dw.com/en/five-arresting-images-of-climate-change-that-are-impossible-to-ignore/a-19166961



Quote:
Drought in Australia
Droughts are becoming an increasingly frequent reality in Australia thanks to climate change shifting rain patterns. The Climate Council reported last year that since the mid-1990s, southeast Australia has experienced a 15 percent decrease in rainfall during early winter and late autumn.
The photo below is a closeup of Wellshot Creek in Queensland, Australia's second-largest state - in March 2014, it suffered from its most widespread drought to date, with 80 percent of the region affected.

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by lee on May 17th, 2016 at 1:51pm

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 1:05pm:
Drought in Australia
Droughts are becoming an increasingly frequent reality in Australia thanks to climate change shifting rain patterns. The Climate Council reported last year that since the mid-1990s, southeast Australia has experienced a 15 percent decrease in rainfall during early winter and late autumn.
The photo below is a closeup of Wellshot Creek in Queensland, Australia's second-largest state - in March 2014, it suffered from its most widespread drought to date, with 80 percent of the region affected.



Wow, since the mid-1990's? Did they have a look at historical data?

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by John Smith on May 17th, 2016 at 1:55pm
how historical did you want to go?


Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by lee on May 17th, 2016 at 2:04pm
That looks like a snapshot in time. What period does it cover?

Since when did the Great Artesian Basin cover South-East Australia?

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by John Smith on May 17th, 2016 at 2:11pm

lee wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 2:04pm:
That looks like a snapshot in time. What period does it cover?

Since when did the Great Artesian Basin cover South-East Australia?



you wanted historical  ... I gave you historical

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by Laugh till you cry on May 17th, 2016 at 2:28pm

lee wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 2:04pm:
That looks like a snapshot in time. What period does it cover?

Since when did the Great Artesian Basin cover South-East Australia?


If you take a North South centreline and an East West centreline, it appears that the Great Artesian Basin is mostly in South East Australia unless you are going to redraw the WA border to include it.

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by lee on May 17th, 2016 at 2:42pm

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 2:28pm:

lee wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 2:04pm:
That looks like a snapshot in time. What period does it cover?

Since when did the Great Artesian Basin cover South-East Australia?


If you take a North South centreline and an East West centreline, it appears that the Great Artesian Basin is mostly in South East Australia unless you are going to redraw the WA border to include it.



Except for Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra etc. ;)

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by Laugh till you cry on May 17th, 2016 at 3:45pm

lee wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 2:42pm:

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 2:28pm:

lee wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 2:04pm:
That looks like a snapshot in time. What period does it cover?

Since when did the Great Artesian Basin cover South-East Australia?


If you take a North South centreline and an East West centreline, it appears that the Great Artesian Basin is mostly in South East Australia unless you are going to redraw the WA border to include it.


Except for Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra etc. ;)


Your Solastalgia bus is waiting to whisk you to the Anthropocene.



Next stop:


Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by lee on May 17th, 2016 at 4:59pm

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 3:45pm:
Your Solastalgia bus is waiting to whisk you to the Anthropocene.



Keep wettin' your pants. That'll help.

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by Laugh till you cry on May 17th, 2016 at 5:33pm

lee wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 4:59pm:

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 3:45pm:
Your Solastalgia bus is waiting to whisk you to the Anthropocene.


Keep wettin' your pants. That'll help.


That worked for you?

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by lee on May 17th, 2016 at 5:35pm

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 5:33pm:
That worked for you?



I wear big boy pants not diapers. I don't have a problem. ;)

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by Gnads on May 17th, 2016 at 5:44pm
The extent of the GAB (22%of the country) is the very reason why CSG exploration & fracking are such a threat to it's viability.

Without it, if it was contaminated by CSG we would have no western QLD, Gulf & Cape, channel country or sthn NT & Sth Aus grazing/cattle/sheep industry.

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by Laugh till you cry on May 17th, 2016 at 5:46pm

lee wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 5:35pm:

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 5:33pm:
That worked for you?


I wear big boy pants not diapers. I don't have a problem. ;)


Bicycle clips?

Title: Re: Australia diagnosed: Solastalgia in Anthropocene
Post by lee on May 17th, 2016 at 5:48pm

Laugh till you cry wrote on May 17th, 2016 at 5:46pm:
Bicycle clips?



Too small. Do you use 1/2" saddles?

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