
Irish Ecomedia
The environmental impacts of empire on Ireland’s past and future
Ireland was Britain’s first colony and its first imperial laboratory—the place where many colonial methods were tested before being exported to the farther-flung portions of the empire. In Irish Ecomedia, Katherine M. Huber examines the environmental impacts of imperial rule and the various ways they have been expressed and rearticulated over time. Drawing on postcolonial ecocriticism, ecomedia studies, and other avant-garde critical methods, Huber considers multiple media at distinct moments of modernization in Ireland and shows how artists, writers, musicians, and filmmakers have challenged dominant narratives of development. Through photography, literature, film, radio, and music, this book reveals alternatives to colonial practices of enclosure and extraction that sacrifice peoples and places in the name of progress. The media, cultural, and environmental resources upon which Irish people and communities have drawn to assert agency bear witness to existent postcolonial modernities that promise more socially and environmentally just futures.
An extremely well written and fascinating overview of how the connections between European colonialism and the environment are rearticulated through emerging media — radio, television, cinema, photography — in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. I have not seen anything like this book in all my reading.- Donna L. Potts, Washington State University, author of Contemporary Irish Writing and Environmentalism: The Wearing of the Deep Green
A thoroughly original contribution, offering a genuinely substantial suite of multidisciplinary analyses of a host of texts. It is well written and accessible but does not compromise the sophistication of its critical vision.- Eoin Flannery, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick, author of Ireland and Ecocriticism: Literature, History, and Environmental Justice
Katherine M. Huber is Assistant Professor of Digital Art, Ecology, and Communication in the Department of Culture Studies at Tilburg University.

