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Abstract

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic reminds us that human and more-than-human health is connected to environmental (un)health. This article explores the linkages between health and the environment in cinema. It draws on such issues as pandemics, pollution and air to illustrate how films like Wolfgang Petersen’s (1995), Todd Haynes’s (1995), M. Night Shyamalan’s (2008), Steven Soderbergh’s (2011) and Colm McCarthy’s (2016), each in their unique ways, address the problem of planetary health. Airborne zoonoses, monstrous plants, toxic fungi and pollution – the films tackle all these issues to emphasize invisible danger, toxicity and sickness that surround humans and more-than-humans alike. Connecting the ideas of health and well-being to the environment and illustrating how this nexus becomes visible in film, specifically through air, this article calls for justice, consideration and care of planetary health. Explicating the tight linkages between pandemics, climate change and environmental degradation at large, as depicted in the selected cinematic examples, this article claims that the recognition of humanity’s dependence on and responsibility for more-than-humans is crucial in times of environmental and health crises.

Funding
This study was supported by the:
  • The Austrian Science Fund (Award 10.55776/P34790)
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/content/journals/10.1386/jem_00103_1
2024-03-06
2024-05-03
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  • Article Type: Article
Keywords: air ; animal ; virus ; film ; health ; pandemic
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