Astrida Neimanis is Canada Research Chair in Feminist Environmental Humanities at the University of British Columbia, Canada on unceded syilx territory. Jennifer Mae Hamilton lives and works on unceded Anaiwan Country as Senior Lecturer in Literary Studies at the University of New England, Australia.
This eye-opening, body-connecting thought experiment provides a blueprint for an embodied approach to climate change. Neimanis and Hamilton span continents and communities with stories of building community infrastructures for dealing with the changing weather. * Naomi Klein * Framed in feminist, queer and anticolonial theories and ethics, Astrida Neimanis and Jennifer Hamilton’s How to Weather Together: Feminist Practice for Climate Change is a brilliant book on weathering, a new concept so well discussed in theory and practice that it will change the way we understand and respond to climate change and weather, as well as to social-political weathers. * Serpil Oppermann, Professor of Environmental Humanities, and Director of Environmental Humanities Center, Cappadocia University, Turkey. *