Breathing with Seagrass: Embodied Estrangement and the Emerging Planthroposcene in Finnish Speculative Fiction

dc.contributor.authorKortekallio Kaisa
dc.contributor.organizationfi=kirjallisuustieteet ja kirjoittaminen|en=Literary Studies and Creative Writing|
dc.contributor.organization-code1.2.246.10.2458963.20.32598777715
dc.converis.publication-id380633479
dc.converis.urlhttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/Publication/380633479
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-27T12:55:24Z
dc.date.available2025-08-27T12:55:24Z
dc.description.abstract<p>This essay introduces recent speculative novels written by Finnish authors and discusses the vegetal agency that permeates them. In Johanna Sinisalo’s The Core of the Sun (2013; translated 2016) and Emmi Itäranta’s The Moonday Letters (2020; translated 2022), plant life entices, intoxicates, and transforms human bodies and minds. Sinisalo experiments with ideas about the coevolution of plants and humans, and Itäranta explores the significance of plants in the contexts of space colonies and ecosabotage. The essay suggests that the novels gesture toward an emerging Planthroposcene. Anthropologist Natasha Myers has proposed “Planthroposcene” as a modification to Anthropocene, the era of global human impact on the Earth. As an “aspirational episteme,” the Planthroposcene considers plants as allies and teachers, and invites researchers and artists to develop ways of “conspiring” with them. While the Planthroposcene invites humans to align themselves with plant life in mutually beneficial relationships, contemporary Finnish speculative fiction suggests that such relationships are not fluid extensions of knowledge, but can also be strange, disturbing, and even destructive. Drawing on the theoretical view that speculative fiction can challenge readers’ habitual patterns of engaging with their lived environments, and thus give rise to unexpected experiences and non-anthropocentric viewpoints, the essay develops the notion of embodied estrangement. Discussing ambivalent plant–human relations demonstrates how the notion of<br>embodied estrangement can contribute to science fiction studies as well as to more-than-human methodologies in literary studies.<br></p>
dc.format.pagerange341
dc.format.pagerange356
dc.identifier.eissn2047-7708
dc.identifier.jour-issn0014-5483
dc.identifier.olddbid199874
dc.identifier.oldhandle10024/182901
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.utupub.fi/handle/11111/44513
dc.identifier.urlhttps://doi.org/10.3828/extr.2023.21
dc.identifier.urnURN:NBN:fi-fe2025082784818
dc.language.isoen
dc.okm.affiliatedauthorKortekallio, Kaisa
dc.okm.discipline6122 Literature studiesen_GB
dc.okm.discipline6122 Kirjallisuuden tutkimusfi_FI
dc.okm.internationalcopublicationnot an international co-publication
dc.okm.internationalityInternational publication
dc.okm.typeA1 ScientificArticle
dc.publisherLiverpool University Press
dc.publisher.countryUnited Kingdomen_GB
dc.publisher.countryBritanniafi_FI
dc.publisher.country-codeGB
dc.publisher.placeLiverpool
dc.relation.doi10.3828/extr.2023.21
dc.relation.ispartofjournalExtrapolation
dc.relation.issue3
dc.relation.volume64
dc.source.identifierhttps://www.utupub.fi/handle/10024/182901
dc.titleBreathing with Seagrass: Embodied Estrangement and the Emerging Planthroposcene in Finnish Speculative Fiction
dc.year.issued2023

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