Difference between revisions of "Cthulucene"

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==Definition & Description==
 
==Definition & Description==
Chthulucene is a neologism created by Donna Haraway and critiques the term Anthropocene to describe the Earth's current age. For Haraway, the Anthropocene does not provide the necessary narrative to break out of thought patterns and actions that are destructive to all living things. It only emphasises the supremacy of humans, their individualism and self-invented exceptionalism.
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*Chthulucene is a neologism created by Donna Haraway and critiques the term Anthropocene to describe the Earth's current age. For Haraway, the Anthropocene does not provide the necessary narrative to break out of thought patterns and actions that are destructive to all living things. It only emphasises the supremacy of humans, their individualism and self-invented exceptionalism.
 
* Derived from the word Cthonic, meaning ancient, underworld and subterranean.
 
* Derived from the word Cthonic, meaning ancient, underworld and subterranean.
 
* The "-cene" suffix refers to an era.
 
* The "-cene" suffix refers to an era.

Revision as of 18:23, 7 July 2025

Name

  • Cthulucene

Origin

  • Coined by scientist and theorist Donna Haraway in her book, Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene in 2016.
  • The term was also in use by Haraway in years prior to 2016.

Definition & Description

  • Chthulucene is a neologism created by Donna Haraway and critiques the term Anthropocene to describe the Earth's current age. For Haraway, the Anthropocene does not provide the necessary narrative to break out of thought patterns and actions that are destructive to all living things. It only emphasises the supremacy of humans, their individualism and self-invented exceptionalism.
  • Derived from the word Cthonic, meaning ancient, underworld and subterranean.
  • The "-cene" suffix refers to an era.

Artists & Creators

Curators and Theorists

Events, Performances, Screenings

Discussions, Talks and Panels

Conferences & Forums

Exhibitions and Catalogues

Publications

Books

Donna Haraway, Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene, Duke University Press, 2016.

Magazines, Journals, Blogs and Websites

Videos, Podcasts, Radio

Essays, Articles, Book Chapters

Primary Links

See Also

Futurisms, Anthropocene, Biocene, Aerocene, Pyrocene, Genecene