CLIMATE CHANGE AND ART
“A View from the Future: Feminist Artists, Scholars, and Activists Turn to Science Fiction to Address the Climate Crisis.”
Eds., Lesley Shipley and Mey-Yen Moriuchi. Art and Activism in the Twenty-first Century. New York: Routledge, forthcoming 2022.
“Envisioning a More Just Future: Feminist Activist Art, Climate Change, and the Anthropocene.”
A Companion to Contemporary Art in a Global Framework. Eds. Amelia Jones and Jane Chin Davidson, eds., London: Wiley Blackwell, forthcoming, 2022.
“Feminist Artists and Activists.”
National Gallery of Melbourne, Australia. Commissioned for an Online Feminist Art Course. Melbourne, Australia, 2021.
“At Memory’s Edge: Climate Trauma in the Arctic Through Film.”
Eds., Subhankar Banerjee, TJ Demos and Emily Eliza Scott. The Routledge Companion to Contemporary Art, Visual Culture and Climate Change. Routledge, London, 2021, 194-203.
“Planetary Precarity and feminist environmental art practices in Antarctica.”
Janet Wilson. Journal of Postcolonial Writing (Taylor and Francis), Volume 56, Issue 3, August 2020.
“Archives of Knowledge and Endangered Objects in the Anthropocene: From Chernobyl to Polar Landscapes in the Work of Lina Selander and Amy Balkin.”
Eds., Susi K. Frank, Kjetil A. Jacobsen, Arctic Archives: Ice, Memory and Entropy. New York: Columbia University Press, 2019, 269-284.
“Antarctica: Feminist Art Practices and Disappearing Polar Landscapes.”
Eds., Klaus Dodds, Alan J. Hemmings and Peder Robers, Handbook on the Politics of the Antarctic. London, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., 2017: 175-190.
“Invisible Landscapes: Extreme Oil and the Arctic in Experimental Film and Activist Art Practices.”
Eds., Anna Stenport, Scott Mackenzie, and Lill-Ann Korber, Arctic Environmental Modernities:Arctic Exploration to the Era of the Anthropocene. London, Palgrave, 2017: 183-195.