Edinburgh Research Archive

Imminence of trees: rhizomatic narrative encounters with indigenous and invasive socioecologies, water, food and livelihoods in Cape Town

dc.contributor.advisor
Spiegel, Samuel
dc.contributor.advisor
Smith, James
dc.contributor.author
O’Donovan, Grace Dalene
dc.contributor.sponsor
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
en
dc.date.accessioned
2025-04-23T10:12:28Z
dc.date.available
2025-04-23T10:12:28Z
dc.date.issued
2025-04-23
dc.description.abstract
The current crises of our time call for nuanced and novel ways of thinking about their interconnections, complexities, and contradictions to afford viable paths ‘through the wilderness’. In the Western Cape, experiences of inequality are intricately related to contextual political, economic, social and ecological oppressions that perpetuate South Africa’s ongoing historical apartheid and (post)colonial legacies, and which are increasingly exacerbated by climate change. This (post)critical, postqualitative research is transdisciplinary in nature and method, and brings together political ecology, posthumanism, indigeneity, and decoloniality, amongst other philosophies and cosmologies to address an entanglement of socioecological development challenges, while embracing a heartful, artsbased methodology of critical rhizomatic narrative. The inquiry beckons to an aesthetic, affective and ontological language-of-landscape in approaching the socioecological and climate challenges of the Anthropocene, against the violences of universalist and Euromodernist thought, frameworks, and research. The inquiry seeks to reveal how interrelated complexities and contradictions of a socioecological, material, spatial, cosmological, economic and political nature play out in the ‘everyday/night lives’ of residents. These stories speak to experiences of crisis-and-resistance in the Anthropocene in relation to invasive species, water, food, medicinal plants, conservation, informal economies, education, and urban gardening. The inquiry engages themes of forests, trees, the ocean, and indigenous southern African storytelling to find rhizomatic pathways to the possibilities of justice, radical hope, and a viable future for all ecological life.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/43357
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/5893
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
O’Donovan, G. D. (2023). Socioecological entanglements, invasive ecology, and climate injustice. In Climate Justice in the Majority World, Routledge eBooks, 221–237. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003214021-12
en
dc.subject
climate change
en
dc.subject
posthumanism
en
dc.subject
invasive socioecologies
en
dc.subject
indigenous socioecologies
en
dc.subject
politics of water
en
dc.subject
politics of food
en
dc.subject
arts based research
en
dc.subject
critical rhizomatic narrative
en
dc.subject
decoloniality
en
dc.subject
climate justice
en
dc.subject
international development
en
dc.subject
political ecology
en
dc.subject
South Africa
en
dc.subject
Cape Town
en
dc.subject
invasive species
en
dc.subject
biodiversity
en
dc.subject
emotional geographies
en
dc.subject
spatial geographies
en
dc.subject
informal economies
en
dc.subject
storytelling
en
dc.subject
transdisciplinary research
en
dc.subject
narrative inquiry
en
dc.subject
translanguaging
en
dc.title
Imminence of trees: rhizomatic narrative encounters with indigenous and invasive socioecologies, water, food and livelihoods in Cape Town
en
dc.title.alternative
The imminence of trees: rhizomatic narrative encounters with indigenous and invasive socioecologies, water, food and livelihoods in Cape Town
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Name:
O'Donovan2025.pdf
Size:
179.94 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:

This item appears in the following Collection(s)