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26 September 2024

No longer is the climate emergency purely an external threat to our wellbeing: this profoundly political circumstance is deeply personal. The summer after giving birth, Sarah Marie Wiebe and her baby endured the 2021 heat dome in British Columbia, with temperatures over 20 degrees above normal, creating all-time heat records across the province. It was the deadliest weather event in Canadian history. The extreme heat landed Wiebe in the hospital, dehydrated and separated from her nursing baby from dawn until dusk. So began a year of mothering through heat, fires and floods. The climate emergency’s many incarnations shaped Wiebe’s politics of parenting and revealed the layers, textures and nuances of the disastrous emergencies we encounter in a world dominated by extractive capitalism.
Drawing on hospital codes to explore the connections, Wiebe opens up tender conversations about intimate matters of how our bodies respond to emergency interventions: informed consent, emergency C-sections, reproductive mental health, and anti-colonial and anti-racist resistance. A critical ecofeminist scholar, Wiebe invites collective envisioning and enacting of caring, ethical relations between humans and the planet, including our atmospheres, lands, waters, animals, plants and each other.
SCIENCE / Global Warming & Climate Change, FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Parenting / Motherhood, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Health Care
Introduction: A State of Emergency as an Embodied Event
Code Red: Feminist Motherhood in a World on Fire
Code Orange: Cultivating Community through Disasters
Code Pink: A Crash ‘n Splash Caesarian
Code Blue: Living through Multiple Crises, Climate Anxiety and Mental Health
Code Green: Circular Economies of Care
Code Black: Systemic Threats, Revealing Violences Slow and Spectacular
Code Grey: A Cautionary Tale of Renewable Extraction
Prismatic Reflections: : Cultivating Care and Community through Multifaceted Crises