The power of lament: Reckoning with loss in an urban forest

This paper explores the lamenting for a street tree to better understand reactions to ecological loss. It responds to calls for social studies research into how ecological loss is felt and expressed, particularly when that loss and its emotional impact is unrecognised. Drawing on a unique dataset of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment and planning. E, Nature and space (Print) Nature and space (Print), 2023-12, Vol.6 (4), p.2358-2378
Hauptverfasser: Phillips, Catherine, Atchison, Jennifer, Straughan, Elizabeth
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper explores the lamenting for a street tree to better understand reactions to ecological loss. It responds to calls for social studies research into how ecological loss is felt and expressed, particularly when that loss and its emotional impact is unrecognised. Drawing on a unique dataset of emails to trees in Melbourne, we consider the most emailed tree, a tree felled despite collective action. Lamenting for this tree is explored as an individual and collective process that includes but extends beyond grief. A lament, we argue, involves shaping and expressing an account of loss that holds others to account. Understood as an embodied and emplaced process, we develop the case for the concept of lament through detailing the feeling, narrating, sharing and placing of loss. We argue that examining lament in this way reveals new insights into lived experiences and expressions related to facing the damage and destruction of nonhuman life and landscapes.
ISSN:2514-8486
2514-8494
DOI:10.1177/25148486231153329