Tropical Imaginaries and Climate Crisis: Embracing Relational Climate Discourses

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Abstract

In this Introduction we situate the Special Issue on ‘Tropical Imaqinaries and Climate Crisis' within the context of a call for relational climate discourses as they arise from particular locations in the tropics. Althouqh climate chanqe is qlobal, it is not experienced everywhere the same and has pronounced effects in the tropics. This is also the region that experienced the ravages -to humans and environments - of colonialism. It is the region of the planet's greatest biodiversity; and will experience the largest extinction losses. We advocate that climate science requires climate imagination - and specifically a tropical imagination - to bring science systems into relation with the human, cultural, social and natural. In short, this Special Issue contributes to calls to humanise climate change. Yet this is not to place the human at the centre of climate stories, rather we embrace more-than-human worlds and the expansion of relational ways of knowing and being. This paper outlines notions of tropicality and rhizomatics that are pertinent to relational discourses, and introduces the twelve papers - articles, essays and speculative fiction pieces - that give voice to tropical imaginaries and climate change in the tropics.

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Lundberg, A., Vital, A. V., & Das, S. (2021). Tropical Imaginaries and Climate Crisis: Embracing Relational Climate Discourses. ETropic, 20(2), 1–31. https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.20.2.2021.3803

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