“…Emergency remote teaching (Hodges et al, 2020) was therefore a key part of the university experience for many students and teachers between 2020 and 2021, and online delivery continues to play a role in the emerging 'new normal' of university teaching (Plotnikof and Utoft, 2021). This work, therefore, fits with the concept of developing a minor pedagogy (Mazzei and Smithers, 2020), in which the folding of posthumanism (Dedeoğlu and Zampaki, 2023) and ecological theory (Kinchin, 2023) entangles with the evidence of experience recorded within personal narratives, alongside the formal narratives expressed in university teaching strategy documents (Kinchin, 2022b). These overlaps are highlighted in the definition of posthumanism offered by Dedeoğlu and Zampaki (2023: 51): 'A praxis of and for the posthuman that aims to decenter the human, decipher hegemonic power relations, undo injustices, and affirmatively contribute to sustainable ways of living together in this world, taking inspiration from diverse philosophical, scientific and artistic traditions, as well as Indigenous worldviews.…”