ABSTRACT

Film has taken a powerful position alongside the global environmental movement, from didactic documentaries to the fantasy pleasures of commercial franchises. This book investigates in particular film’s complex role in representing ecological traumas. Eco-trauma cinema represents the harm we, as humans, inflict upon our natural surroundings, or the injuries we sustain from nature in its unforgiving iterations. The term encompasses both circumstances because these seemingly distinct instances of ecological harm are often related, and even symbiotic: the traumas we perpetuate in an ecosystem through pollution and unsustainable resource management inevitably return to harm us.

Contributors to this volume engage with eco-trauma cinema in its three general forms: accounts of people who are traumatized by the natural world, narratives that represent people or social processes which traumatize the environment or its species, and stories that depict the aftermath of ecological catastrophe. The films they examine represent a central challenge of our age: to overcome our disavowal of environmental crises, to reflect on the unsavoury forces reshaping the planet's ecosystems, and to restructure the mechanisms responsible for the state of the earth.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Eco-Trauma Cinema

chapter 1|21 pages

Evolution, Extinction and the Eco-Trauma Film

Darwin's Nightmare (2004) and A Zed & Two Naughts (1985)

chapter 3|16 pages

Great Southern Wounds

The Trauma of Australian Cinema

chapter 4|25 pages

Into the Wilde?

Art, Technologically Mediated Kinship, and the Lethal Indifference of Nature in Werner Herzog's Grizzly Man

chapter 5|21 pages

The Dangers of Biosecurity

The Host (2006) and the Geopolitics of Outbreak

chapter 6|12 pages

Biting Back

America, Nature, and Feminism in Teeth

chapter 7|18 pages

The Spirits of Globalization

Masochistic Ecologies in Fabrice Du Welz's Vinyan

chapter 8|16 pages

Love in the Times of Ecocide

Environmental Trauma and Comic Relief in Andrew Stanton's WALL-E

chapter 9|27 pages

Eavesdropping in The Cove

Interspecies Ethics, Public and Private Space and Trauma under Water

chapter 10|24 pages

Cooling the Geopolitical to Warm the Ecological

How Human-Induced Warming Phenomena Transformed Modern Horror

chapter 11|18 pages

Toxic Media

On the Ecological Impact of Cinema