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      Australia Burning

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          Abstract

          Hiking through the Australian Alps in November of 2019 and looking down on a burning world from up high in Kosciuszko National Park, Tom Griffiths reckons with the social and environmental impacts of increasing-in-frequency-and-intensity forest fires across the country. Placing the events of Australia’s Black Summer, a period of intense forest fires from 2019 to 2020, in the context of environmental history, this article examines Australia’s position on the front line of the Pyrocene and the nation’s multipronged rash of climate denialism while offering insights about Australia in a warming world.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Springs: The Rachel Carson Center Review
          Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Munich, Germany
          2751-9317
          2022
          13 December 2022
          Article
          10.5282/RCC-SPRINGS-2856
          115b57e7-29ff-4dde-bab3-12e2afaa67ca

          CC BY 4.0 2022 Tom Griffiths

          History

          Literary studies,Philosophy of science,Environmental change,Environmental studies,Contemporary history,Cultural studies
          Pyrocene,environmental humanities,environmental history,Australia,forest fires,bushfires,climate denialism,colonialism

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