Being Moved by Nature in the Anthropocene: On the Limits of the Ecological Sublime

Sage Publications: Emotion Review 13 (4):299-305 (2021)
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Abstract

Emotion Review, Volume 13, Issue 4, Page 299-305, October 2021. According to recent accounts, we experience the emotion of “being moved” when a situation brings into play our core values. What are the core values evoked by nonhuman landscapes, however, particularly as the distinction between man-made and natural environments becomes increasingly blurry in the so-called Anthropocene? That is the central question tackled by this article. I start by rethinking the sublime as an affect that, since Romanticism, has shaped Western attitudes toward nature. I argue that today's climate crisis calls for an expansion of our affective engagement with the nonhuman: the sublime can be part of our emotional repertoire, but only if it is complicated by feelings that point to constitutive human–nonhuman entanglement.

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reprint Caracciolo, Marco (2021) "Being Moved by Nature in the Anthropocene: On the Limits of the Ecological Sublime". Emotion Review 13(4):299-305

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