Galvanizing glaciology: Thoughts on an ecocritical art history

Glaciers are marked by the contours of time. Flow lines and lateral moraines (ridges of accumulated dirt and rocks) demarcate the movement of ice with traces of debris incised into the glacier’s icy surface. Tributaries, rivers, and floods unfurl the flow of the ice into meltwater. As many of the world’s glaciers continue to thaw and no longer reproduce, they have been classed as an endangered species. They are being memorialised rather than immortalised. As Julie Cruikshank wrote over a decade ago, glaciers are “a cryospheric weather vane for potential natural and social upheaval.”

Galvanizing glaciology: Thoughts on an ecocritical art history

EHN is a 100% independent, volunteer-run, award winning platform to showcase the environment-related work and expertise of graduate students and early career scholars who identify as women, trans and/or nonbinary people. Since its launch in 2018, EHN has become a space to connect with like-minded people, find a sense of community, and talk about research, interests, and academic life in honest, authentic, and creative ways.

  • Source: Environmental History Now (EHN)
  • Type: Educational resource
  • Accessed: 26 January 2026

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2022