Introduction Roman Bartosch (University of Cologne, Germany), Ursula Heise (UCLA, USA) Kate Rigby ( University of Cologne, Germany) Section 1: Unsettling Histories 1. Our Ancestors' Dystopia Now: Indigenous conservation and the Anthropocene Kyle Powys White ( University of Michigan, USA) 2. Military Snails: Multispecies Solidarities in Hawai'i Thom van Dooren (University of Sydney, Australia) 3. Extinction as Cultural Heritage: The Dodo and the Turtle Dolly Jørgensen ( University of Stavanger, Norway) Section 2: Unsettling Narratives 4. Extinction and Experience in Digital Eco-Games Roman Bartosch (University of Cologne, Germany), and Julia Hoydis ( University of Graz, Austria) 5. Coextinction? The Southern Resident Killer Whales in Culture and Science Greg Garrard ( UBC Okanagan, Canada) 6. Will Revery Alone Do? A (Mono)cultural Narrative of Bee Decline Eline Tabak (University of Oulu, Finland) Section 3: Unsettling Boundaries 7. Speaking in Spores: Extinction and the Fungal Imaginary Sicily Fiennes, Graham Huggan, Stefan Skrimshire, and Serena Turton-Hughes (University of Leeds, UK) 8.
Multispecies Influenza: An Environmental Humanities Approach to Zoonotic Disease Natasha Fijn ( The Australian National University, Australia) 9. Animal domestication, genealogies of exile, and the long Anthropocene Linda Williams ( Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Australia) Section 4: Unsettling Ethics 10. 'Bees for Peace': Pollinators, Plants and Places of Worship Carrie Dohe and Kate Rigby (University of Cologne, Germany) 11. Detectives on an Alien Planet: Distant Pasts, Mass Extinctions, and Speculative Futures Ursula Heise (UCLA, USA) 12. Should Humanity Live Forever? Human Extinction and Biodiacritics Ted Toadvine (Pennsylvania State University, USA) Afterword Richard Kerridge ( Bath Spa University, UK).