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Från det lokala till det globala: Ekokritiska tendenser i poesi och dokumentärfilm

Johansson, Ebba Tuva LU (2025) FIVK10 20242
Film Studies
Abstract
This thesis explores how ecological themes are represented through local and global
perspectives in Juliana Spahr’s ecopoetry, Mikael Kristersson’s Ljusår (2008), and Jiuliang
Wang’s documentary Plastic China (2016). By applying ecocritical theory with a focus on
glocalization and interconnectedness, the study examines how local environments become
metaphors for global ecological crises.

Spahr’s poetry emphasizes the interconnectedness of humans and planetary systems through
bodily processes like breathing and ecological cycles, reflecting how intimate experiences
intersect with global environmental changes. Similarly, Ljusår presents the Swedish natural
landscape as an active ecological space where humans and non-human life... (More)
This thesis explores how ecological themes are represented through local and global
perspectives in Juliana Spahr’s ecopoetry, Mikael Kristersson’s Ljusår (2008), and Jiuliang
Wang’s documentary Plastic China (2016). By applying ecocritical theory with a focus on
glocalization and interconnectedness, the study examines how local environments become
metaphors for global ecological crises.

Spahr’s poetry emphasizes the interconnectedness of humans and planetary systems through
bodily processes like breathing and ecological cycles, reflecting how intimate experiences
intersect with global environmental changes. Similarly, Ljusår presents the Swedish natural
landscape as an active ecological space where humans and non-human life coexist beyond
anthropocentric narratives. In contrast, Plastic China offers a stark representation of global
capitalism's environmental toll, depicting how Western consumer waste impacts a Chinese
recycling village, turning a local site into a symbol of global inequality and environmental
degradation.

By comparing these works through an intermedial analysis, the thesis highlights how artistic
representations of place can merge the local with the global. Through poetic and cinematic
strategies, the studied works challenge binary distinctions between human and non-human,
nature and culture, emphasizing the ecological entanglements that define our shared world.
This investigation concludes that glocalization serves as a crucial analytical framework for
understanding how art can articulate the complexities of the climate crisis by anchoring
global environmental concerns in specific, material environments. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Johansson, Ebba Tuva LU
supervisor
organization
course
FIVK10 20242
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Ekokritik, Glokalisering, Miljörepresentation, Ekodokumentärfilm, Ekopoesi
language
Swedish
id
9182806
date added to LUP
2025-01-29 13:39:06
date last changed
2025-01-29 13:39:06
@misc{9182806,
  abstract     = {{This thesis explores how ecological themes are represented through local and global
perspectives in Juliana Spahr’s ecopoetry, Mikael Kristersson’s Ljusår (2008), and Jiuliang
Wang’s documentary Plastic China (2016). By applying ecocritical theory with a focus on
glocalization and interconnectedness, the study examines how local environments become
metaphors for global ecological crises.

Spahr’s poetry emphasizes the interconnectedness of humans and planetary systems through
bodily processes like breathing and ecological cycles, reflecting how intimate experiences
intersect with global environmental changes. Similarly, Ljusår presents the Swedish natural
landscape as an active ecological space where humans and non-human life coexist beyond
anthropocentric narratives. In contrast, Plastic China offers a stark representation of global
capitalism's environmental toll, depicting how Western consumer waste impacts a Chinese
recycling village, turning a local site into a symbol of global inequality and environmental
degradation.

By comparing these works through an intermedial analysis, the thesis highlights how artistic
representations of place can merge the local with the global. Through poetic and cinematic
strategies, the studied works challenge binary distinctions between human and non-human,
nature and culture, emphasizing the ecological entanglements that define our shared world.
This investigation concludes that glocalization serves as a crucial analytical framework for
understanding how art can articulate the complexities of the climate crisis by anchoring
global environmental concerns in specific, material environments.}},
  author       = {{Johansson, Ebba Tuva}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Från det lokala till det globala: Ekokritiska tendenser i poesi och dokumentärfilm}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}