2016
DOI: 10.1177/1474474015624243
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Becoming ecological citizens: connecting people through performance art, food matter and practices

Abstract: Engaging the interest of Western citizens in the complex food connections that shape theirs’ and others’ personal wellbeing around issues such as food security and access is challenging. This article is critical of the food marketplace as the site for informing consumer behaviour and argues instead for arts-based participatory activities to support the performance of ecological citizens in non-commercial spaces. Following the ongoing methodological and conceptual fascination with performance, matter and practi… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…nature walks or gardening), social (i.e. human) relations can be key to developing sensitivity to nonhuman issues (Pitt, 2018;Roe & Buser, 2016). In this sense, we can see how Trevor, Hugh and Loraine have also facilitated and nurtured enabling place encounters (Duff, 2012) and opportunities for intimate human-human interactions in order to stimulate and support quality relations with nonhumans.…”
Section: Interdependencies Of Carementioning
confidence: 98%
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“…nature walks or gardening), social (i.e. human) relations can be key to developing sensitivity to nonhuman issues (Pitt, 2018;Roe & Buser, 2016). In this sense, we can see how Trevor, Hugh and Loraine have also facilitated and nurtured enabling place encounters (Duff, 2012) and opportunities for intimate human-human interactions in order to stimulate and support quality relations with nonhumans.…”
Section: Interdependencies Of Carementioning
confidence: 98%
“…what they are, how they function) and the role of water assets and issues in community relations. Broadly, the concept of 'hydrocitizenship' references the wider notion of ecological citizenship, which sees the need for transformations in how society works at individual and collective levels, as essential if humans are going to generate more ecologically sustainable forms of living (Dobson, 2003;Roe & Buser, 2016). Our focus on water reflected an effort to narrow the concept towards one (albeit central) aspect of ecological thinkingrelations of water.…”
Section: Water-based Socially Engaged Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Was the political‐aesthetic of these images cultivating a new sensibility to the microbial; a microbial citizenship? Following Roe and Buser () who argue participatory performance art can engage people with the politics of ecologies, through staging embodied intra‐actions with non‐humans, here the political aesthetic provokes wonder at what microbial citizenship could be. As health policies tackle the challenge of AMR, political aesthetics work to give new visions on the microbial, generated through embodied activities.…”
Section: Enhancing the Multispecies Experiencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such collaborations have been extensive and proven to be of great value in the development of both artistic and geographical knowledge (Schaaf, Worrall-Hood, and Jones 2017). Various forms of art are utilised in such collaborations, including performance art (Roe and Buser 2016), exhibitions (Young and Kelly 2017), and poetry (Jones and Jam 2016;Philo 2017). This article adds to these art-geography collaborations by using big data in performance art.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%