1st Edition
Climate Change Temporalities Explorations in Vernacular, Popular, and Scientific Discourse
1. Climate Change Temporalities: Narratives, Genres, and Tropes, Kyrre Kverndokk and Anne Eriksen Part 1: Vernacular Notions of Climate Change Temporality 2. ‘Where is global warming when you need it?’: The Role of Immediacy in Vernacular Constructions of Climate Change, Diane E. Goldstein 3. The Great Re-Skilling: Understandings of Generation, Tradition, and Nostalgia in Everyday-Life Climate Activism, Lone Ree Milkær 4. In the Shadow of Apocalyptic Futures: Climate Change as a Cultural Trope in Vernacular Discourse, Camilla Asplund Ingemark Part 2: Mediating Climate Change Temporality 5. The Extreme Summer of 2018: Norwegian Weather News and the Politics of Weatherlore, Kyrre Kverndokk 6. The Prophetic Tone in True Detective: Sensing the Time of the Future Climate Disaster, Isak Winkel Holm 7. Advocating Equilibrium: On Climate Change at Public Aquariums, Lars Kaijser Part 3: Cultural Histories of Climate Change Temporality 8. The Sixth Extinction: Naming Time in a New Way, Marit Ruge Bjærke 9. Smoke, Smells, and Seaweeds in Eighteenth-Century Norway, Anne Eriksen 10. Origin Myths from the Cultural Historical Archive of the Anthropocene: Vico, Burnet, and the Time of the Deluge, John Ødemark Part 4: Conclusion 11. Living the Climate Change, Marit Ruge Bjærke
Biography
Kyrre Kverndokk is Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Bergen, Norway.
Marit Ruge Bjærke is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Cultural Studies at the University of Bergen, Norway.
Anne Eriksen is Professor of Cultural History at the University of Oslo, Norway.






