Climate Change and the Inescapable Present

The crisis of climate change is a difficult phenomenon to conceptualize, particularly in light of how we experience time and how our consciousness works. It is an event that spans tense in ways that are difficult to pinpoint, and it provides no past precedent to shape our future anticipations. Furth...

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Main Author: Jeanne Tiehen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Performance Philosophy 2018-08-01
Series:Performance Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/194
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spelling doaj-122882f2f7394c1ea22fefeab6382a6f2020-11-25T00:57:33ZengPerformance PhilosophyPerformance Philosophy2057-71762018-08-014112313810.21476/PP.2018.41194129Climate Change and the Inescapable PresentJeanne Tiehen0Wayne State CollegeThe crisis of climate change is a difficult phenomenon to conceptualize, particularly in light of how we experience time and how our consciousness works. It is an event that spans tense in ways that are difficult to pinpoint, and it provides no past precedent to shape our future anticipations. Furthermore, climate change encounters us at a moment when time also feels compressed. This paper explores climate change and its relationship to time by assessing how theatre, with its own phenomenologically unique qualities of time and experience, has portrayed these tensions. Utilizing phenomenological theories of time from Husserl and Heidegger, and drawing on philosophical and cultural theories of presentism, this paper examines how these ideas manifest in two climate change plays: Moira Buffini, Matt Charman, Penelope Skinner, and Jack Thorne’s Greenland (2011) and Stephen Emmott’s Ten Billion (2012). In conclusion, it is argued that theatre’s own conventions of time and space allows an inescapable present to exist, in which audiences are given a phenomenological experience of climate change that is otherwise unparalleled.http://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/194PhenomenologyTimeTheatre
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeanne Tiehen
spellingShingle Jeanne Tiehen
Climate Change and the Inescapable Present
Performance Philosophy
Phenomenology
Time
Theatre
author_facet Jeanne Tiehen
author_sort Jeanne Tiehen
title Climate Change and the Inescapable Present
title_short Climate Change and the Inescapable Present
title_full Climate Change and the Inescapable Present
title_fullStr Climate Change and the Inescapable Present
title_full_unstemmed Climate Change and the Inescapable Present
title_sort climate change and the inescapable present
publisher Performance Philosophy
series Performance Philosophy
issn 2057-7176
publishDate 2018-08-01
description The crisis of climate change is a difficult phenomenon to conceptualize, particularly in light of how we experience time and how our consciousness works. It is an event that spans tense in ways that are difficult to pinpoint, and it provides no past precedent to shape our future anticipations. Furthermore, climate change encounters us at a moment when time also feels compressed. This paper explores climate change and its relationship to time by assessing how theatre, with its own phenomenologically unique qualities of time and experience, has portrayed these tensions. Utilizing phenomenological theories of time from Husserl and Heidegger, and drawing on philosophical and cultural theories of presentism, this paper examines how these ideas manifest in two climate change plays: Moira Buffini, Matt Charman, Penelope Skinner, and Jack Thorne’s Greenland (2011) and Stephen Emmott’s Ten Billion (2012). In conclusion, it is argued that theatre’s own conventions of time and space allows an inescapable present to exist, in which audiences are given a phenomenological experience of climate change that is otherwise unparalleled.
topic Phenomenology
Time
Theatre
url http://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/194
work_keys_str_mv AT jeannetiehen climatechangeandtheinescapablepresent
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