Vraiment intéressant article, riche de références littéraires et artistiques.
Telling a different tale: literary, historical and meteorological readings of a Norfolk Heatwave.
Auteur Mike Hulme, University of Cambridge, juillet 2012 - Revue Climatic Change
On le trouve sur Researchgate.net. Inscription probablement requise donc pas de lien direct.
Extrait.
Mark Lynas’ first book High Tide: News from a Warming World sought to connect scientific depictions of climate change with travelogue descriptions of the effects of climate change in diverse places (Lynas 2004). The Cape Farewell project was established by David Buckland in 2001 to allow artists, writers and educators to experience the High Arctic and to ‘bring home stories and artworks that tell how a warming planet is impacting on this wilderness’ (Buckland et al. 2006). And ecologist Anna Lawrence explores how popular phenology in the UK — in her case amateur ornithology — allows for the co-construction of accounts of climate change which pay respect to both physical and imagined realities (Lawrence 2009).
En illustration, la couverture d’un ouvrage cité : The Perfect Summer - Dancing into Shadow in 1911 - autrice Juliet Nicolson, 2011. Diverses articles de recension dont celui de The Guardian.

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