Journal article

Finding comfort and conviviality with urban trees

E Straughan, C Phillips, J Atchison

Cultural Geographies | Published : 2023

Open access

Abstract

This paper develops cultural geographic understandings of more-than-human comfort and conviviality by analysing emails sent to trees living in the City of Melbourne, Australia. The emails arrive from near and far, sharing personal dilemmas, jokes, poetry, confessions, political concerns, and more. These messages provide a unique opportunity to consider how trees become foregrounded in people’s everyday lives. Working through the geographies of comfort expressed in these emails, the paper develops understanding about the politics of dis/comfort by examining how it is generative of conviviality. In doing so, the paper builds on a small body of work exploring more-than-human conviviality by bri..

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Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publica-tion of this article: The research was funded by internal grants from the University of Melbourne and University of Wollongong and, later, by an Australian Research Council grant (Phillips, Atchison & Head, DP210100884).