User:Allaboutrocks/Slow violence/Bibliography
You will be compiling your bibliography and creating an outline of the changes you will make in this sandbox.
Bibliography
As you gather the sources for your Wikipedia contribution, think about the following:
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Bibliography
[edit]Edit this section to compile the bibliography for your Wikipedia assignment. Add the name and/or notes about what each source covers, then use the "Cite" button to generate the citation for that source.
- S., Meenakshi; Shah, Krupa (27 July 2023). "Imagining 'Slow Violence' in the Jharia Coalfields of India: Disrupting Energy Modernity through Photography". South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies.
- This peer-reviewed journal explores slow violence through photography that attempts to challenge "energy modernity" and shed light on the slow violence that takes place to create our modern systems of energy. It highlights dispossession in many different forms and across space and time as a key aspect of this process in the Indian coalfields of Jharia.[1]
- Ahmann, Chloe (2018). "'IT'S EXHAUSTING TO CREATE AN EVENT OUT OF NOTHING': Slow violence and the Manipulation of Time". Cultural Anthropology.
- This article details the protest of slow violence in a specific energy project in 2015: the Maryland Department of Environment's Fairfield Renewable Energy Project. This project was a trash incinerator proposal that aimed to bring energy to "the Baltimore metropolitan area" while bringing pollution and toxicity to another Maryland neighborhood[2].
- Kressner, I., Mutis, A. M., & Pettinaroli, E. (Eds.). (2020). Ecofictions, ecorealities and slow violence in Latin America and the Latinx world. Routledge.
- This book contextualizes slow violence in the Latinx World and examine forms of resistance and attention being brought to ecological issues that are forms of slow violence, specifically through art, activism, and culture.[3]
- Pain, Rachel (2019-02). "Chronic urban trauma: the slow violence of housing dispossession", Urban Studies. 56 (2): 385-400.
- Rachel Pain introduces how slow violence can be brought into urban studies as she applies a psychological lens. She specifically uses data and information from a long-term study on a "former coalmining village in north-east England"[4] that researched the effects of slow violence on this community.
- Published in a reliable, peer-reviewed journal that specializes in Urban Studies in 2019
- Rezwana, Nahid; Pain, Rachel. (2021-10)."Gender-based violence before, during, and after cyclones: slow violence and layered disasters", Disasters. 45 (4): 739-995.
- gendered examples of slow violence.
- Chapter 1, "In the Heat of the Past: Towards a History of the Fossil Economy" in Fossil capital: the rise of steam power and the roots of global warming.[5]
- Slow violence referenced in part of this chapter. The concept is compared to another by Stephen Gardiner and developed in the context of the fossil fuel economy. While it is only discussed for a page or two, this will help develop/refine the working definition of slow violence and may provide some global examples.
Examples:
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References
[edit]- ^ S., Meenakshi; Shah, Krupa (2023). "Imaging 'Slow Violence' in the Jharia Coalfields of India: Disrupting Energy Modernity through Photography". South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies: 1–24.
- ^ Ahmann, Chloe (2018). ""'ITS EXHAUSTING TO CREATE AN EVENT OUT OF NOTHING': Slow Violence and the Manipulation of Time"". Cultural Anthropology. 33 (1): 142–171.
- ^ Kressner, Ilka; Mutis, Ana Maria; Pettinaroli, Elizabeth M. Ecofictions, ecorealities and slow violence in Latin America and the Latinx world. New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN 2020.
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value: length (help) - ^ Pain, Rachel (2019-02). "Chronic urban trauma: The slow violence of housing dispossession". Urban Studies. 56 (2): 385–400. doi:10.1177/0042098018795796. ISSN 0042-0980 – via Sage Journals.
{{cite journal}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Malm, Andreas (2016). "In the Heat of the Past: Towards a History of the Fossil Economy". Fossil capital: the rise of steam power and the roots of global warming. London; New York: Verso. pp. 1–19.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
Outline of proposed changes
[edit]- Rewrite/condense sections to make wording flow better
- Add to examples section:
- "Ecofictions, ecorealities and slow violence in Latin America and the Latinx world" edited by Ilka Kressner, Ana Maria Mutis, and Elizabeth M. Pettinaroli (expanding on global perspective, not just an issue rooted in America)
- "Chronic urban trauma: the slow violence of housing dispossession" by Rachel Pain (adding to current explanations of social impacts)
- "Rhino poaching and the "slow violence" of conservation related resettlement in Mozambique's Limpopo National Park" by Rebecca Witter and Terre Satterfield (explicitly environmental example, physical geographical example)
- Add definitions of slow violence outside of an environmental context:
- "The institutionalised momentum of slow violence: spatiotemporal contradictions in young people's account of school bullying" by Ben Lohmeyer (sociological perspective)
Now that you have compiled a bibliography, it's time to plan out how you'll improve your assigned article.
In this section, write up a concise outline of how the sources you've identified will add relevant information to your chosen article. Be sure to discuss what content gap your additions tackle and how these additions will improve the article's quality. Consider other changes you'll make to the article, including possible deletions of irrelevant, outdated, or incorrect information, restructuring of the article to improve its readability or any other change you plan on making. This is your chance to really think about how your proposed additions will improve your chosen article and to vet your sources even further. Note: This is not a draft. This is an outline/plan where you can think about how the sources you've identified will fill in a content gap. |