Entanglements:
Journal of Posthumanities
E-ISSN: 3107-488X

Issues

Volume 2, Issue 1 (Open Issue)
Jan-Jun 2026

 Volume 2, Issue 1 (Open Issue) View/Download Full Issue
(Volume 2, Issue 1, Jan-Jun 2026)

(Article) ‐ Volume 2, Issue 1 (Open Issue)
Beyond the Anthropocene: A Study of Posthumanism and Ecocriticism in Children's and Speculative Fiction
Authored By — Dr. Gurpreet Kaur

Abstract

The Anthropocene, characterized by unchecked human dominance over nature through technological advancements and industrial expansion, has led to profound ecological disruptions-manifesting in climate change, biodiversity loss, and widespread environmental degradation. Literature has long been a site for interrogating these crises, offering speculative futures and ethical critiques that challenge anthropocentric worldviews. As ecological devastation escalates, posthumanism and ecocriticism emerge as vital theoretical frameworks, dismantling hierarchical constructs that privilege human supremacy and reimagining the interdependent relationships between human and non-human entities. Ecocriticism, as theorized by scholars such as Cheryll Glotfelty, Lawrence Buell, and Greg Garrard, and Posthumanism, as theorized by Cary Wolfe and Rosi Braidotti, and Donna Haraway's cyborg ontology, will provide a framework for analyzing literature's role in imagining post-Anthropocene futures where coexistence and reciprocity replace dominance as the foundation for ecological narratives. This study explores how select speculative fiction and children's picture books subvert anthropocentric perspectives, advocating for ecological consciousness, responsible environmental stewardship, and ethical coexistence. Through texts such as Barbara Kingsolver's Flight Behavior and Nnedi Okorafor's Lagoon and classic children's books including Shel Silverstein's "The Giving Tree,"Dr. Seuss's "The Lorax," Julia Donaldson's "The Snail and the Whale," and Emily Haworth-Booth's "The Last Tree," this paper interrogates shifting representations of ecological responsibility, human-animal entanglements, and the transformative potential of technology. This study argues that the continued exploitation of nature will inevitably erode human supremacy, forcing a paradigm shift toward a shared existence in which technology functions not as an instrument of control, but as a mediator for ecological restoration and interspecies cooperation. Through the lens of ecocriticism and posthumanism, literature becomes a powerful tool for reimagining ecological futures, advocating for environmental justice, and fostering a deeper understanding of humanity's place within the broader web of life.

Keywords

Posthumanism, Ecocriticism, Literature, Environment, Children's Literature, Climate Change.
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