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Öğe Çevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2019-2020 Dönemi Faaliyet Raporu(2020) Akıllı, Sinan; Oppermann, SerpilÇevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2019-2020 Dönemi Faaliyet RaporuÖğe Çevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2020-2021 Dönemi Faaliyet Raporu(2021) Akıllı, Sinan; Oppermann, SerpilÇevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2020-2021 Dönemi Faaliyet RaporuÖğe Çevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2021-2022 Dönemi Faaliyet Raporu(2022) Akıllı, Sinan; Oppermann, SerpilÇevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2021-2022 Dönemi Faaliyet RaporuÖğe Çevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2022-2023 Dönemi Faaliyet Raporu(2023) Akıllı, Sinan; Oppermann, SerpilÇevreci Beşeri Bilimler Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi 2022-2023 Dönemi Faaliyet RaporuÖğe Öğe Entangled Stories of Life: Narrative Agencies and “Ethics of Worlding” in the Quantum Realm(Kapadokya Üniversitesi Yayınları, 2022) Oppermann, SerpilThe foundational principle of quantum physics is the notion of entanglement, which can best be described as the ontological inseparability of subatomic particles in such a way that the measurement of one particle’s quantum state determines the possible quantum states of all other particles. Supported by hard data in quantum physics, this nonlocal connectedness comprises the internal relatedness of all existence at all levels of reality, which is also an expressive (or, narrative) interconnectedness material ecocriticism labels as narrative agencies of storied matter. Matter’s expressive capacity is best observable in the subatomic particles that have a certain degree of creative expression when they communicate nonlocally. I argue that being part of this reality means being part of the entangled stories of life, which compels us to act responsibly and develop a new ethical attention toward our interconnections in the indivisible field of existence. Ethical responsibility here is accountable “becoming with each other” (Haraway 2008), which Karen Barad calls “ethics of worlding” (2007) necessary to sustain our storied existence (from the subatomic particles all the way up).Öğe “Envisioning a New Anthropocenario”(NANO: New American Notes Online, 2018) Oppermann, SerpilBeing more than a geological concept, the Anthropocene mirrors the worldly entanglements of many species in overlapping trajectories of social, ecological, and geological forces. In this perspective the Anthropos figure is no longer envisioned as an epoch-making subject operating across multispecies habitats in messy ways, but as an earth-bound being ultimately inseparable from other species and the environment. This article argues for a new Anthroposcenario in which the stories of earthly agencies can be told in what Donna Haraway calls “multispecies storytelling” practices. But it also contends that multispecies storytelling can be made more effective through the perspective of material ecocriticism, which explores the narrative potential embedded in all forms of matter, positing that humans are not the only beings capable of telling stories. In the new Anthroposcenario, everything that is more than human can reveal the intertwined narratives of interdependence, relation making, and coexistence.Öğe "Estok, Simon C.. The Ecophobia Hypothesis. New York: Routledge, 2018, 197 pp."(International Comparative Literature, 2018) Oppermann, SerpilN/AÖğe “How the Material World Communicates: Insights from Material Ecocriticism”(Routledge, 2019) Oppermann, SerpilN/AÖğe Öğe Öğe Öğe New Materialism and the Nonhuman Story(Cambridge University Press, 2021) Oppermann, SerpilOffers a comprehensive introduction to the environmental humanities. It addresses the 21st century recognition of an environmental crisis.Öğe Seeds of Transformative Change(Cappadocia University Press, 2020) Hartman, Steven; Oppermann, Serpil; Akıllı, Sinan; Hartman, Steven; Oppermann, SerpilWelcome to the inaugural issue of Ecocene: Cappadocia Journal of Environmental Humanities, a peer-reviewed, open-access journal for the growing international community of environmental humanists committed to the Earth and all its inhabitants. Ecocene aspires to stimulate, and challenge, this increasingly diverse community by foregrounding interdisciplinary, transdisciplinary and post-disciplinary approaches to research and scholarship. Though appeals for border-crossing approaches along such lines are often hallmarks of programmatic calls for transformative knowledge-action frameworks in environmental studies and sustainability science, they remain underserved by appropriate publication outlets that seek, by design, to engage a plurality of disciplines and knowledge domains on questions of common interest.Öğe “Storied Seas and Living Metaphors in the Blue Humanities”(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2019) Oppermann, SerpilABSTRACT: This article investigates the terraqueous entanglements of human and marine life in material and discursive contexts through an aquatic practice of material ecocritical theory. Material ecocriticism encourages us to read the ecology of the planet’s protean seas by way of their storied dimension, and to think the blue humanities and the discoveries of marine sciences through one another, in creative ways. In this context, two interlinked questions surface. 1. How do we theorize the seascapes whose materiality is hydrous without obfuscating its reality in figurative conceptualizing? 2. If our knowledge of the sea depends on how it is represented, and interpreted, will the sea’s biogeophysical existence cease to exist? I argue that the meanings of the sea always remain in the interstice between the discursive and the real, and that the experience of the sea gains meaning only in their corollary dynamics.Öğe “The Scale of the Anthropocene: Material Ecocritical Reflections”(Mosaic, 2018) Oppermann, SerpilThis essay considers the messy intra-actions of the Anthropocene agencies using the lenses of material ecocriticism.Öğe Turkish Ecocriticism: From Neolithic to Contemporary Timescapes(Lexington Books, 2020) Oppermann, Serpil; Akıllı, Sinan; Oppermann, Serpil; Akıllı, SinanN/AÖğe What Matters Most Is the Wounded Planet(Routledge, 2021) Oppermann, SerpilIndeed, “something miniscule” – an almost indelible entity – has toppled life on a global scale for almost two years now, impelling us to notice the precariousness of life “that hang(s) together in fragile coordinations” (Swanson et al. M2). Shaped by the destabilizing forces of a deadly virus infection, lock-down depression, and the resulting social traumas, we are now living in the Pandemic-Ridden Age of the Anthropocene.