Mess-making as a force for resistance: Reimagining Environmental Educational Research for Multispecies Flourishing

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Abstract

We are the living. We find ourselves in a mess that is sometimes called the ‘Anthropocene’. This is a mess that has been hidden, ignored, neglected through a narrative of progress, consumption, linearity, categorisation, control, prosperity, rationality. To respond to this narrative, we employ ‘mess-making’ as a force for resistance. We rethink our more-than-human relations by concepting with mess to invigorate, agitate and provoke. Employing Haraway’s (2008) ‘messmates’, we conceptualise how ‘we’ as ecosystems of thriving life forms are constantly living, learning and dying together and need to find new ways to co-research with/in/for more-than-human methodologies. These, we suggest, are inherently messy. The paper is organised in a nonconventional way in that it is mostly created by more-than-human narratives gathered from two doctoral post-qualitative inquiries exploring play in an urban forest school in London and animal-child relations in a wall-less school in Bali. We explore how mess-making is both generative and challenging as data emerge in dynamic and exciting ways. With this messy turn, we illuminate potential for educational futures that support multispecies flourishing.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)340-358
Number of pages19
JournalAustralian Journal of Environmental Education
Volume40
Issue number2
Early online date26 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Sept 2024

Acknowledgements

We acknowledge how one reviewer was struck by the contradictions, tensions and paradoxes of our mess-making and tidying processes. Tidying coexists with mess-making. We thank our reviewers for helping in the process of tidying up the mess-making of this article.

Funding

Hannah Hogarth\u2019s doctoral research was funded by a University of Bath University Research Studentship Award (URSA).

Keywords

  • Childhoodnature
  • concepting
  • mess-making
  • messmates
  • multispecies flourishing
  • multispecies moments
  • post-qualitative
  • resistance

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Education
  • General Environmental Science

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