Linking environmental concerns and popular geopolitics, this innovative volume blurs the boundaries of both by engaging in a wide ranging critical survey of novels, television and movies that represent the earth and its inhabitants in the numerous genres of contemporary culture. At the intersection of environmental humanities, political geography, gender, race and critical cultural studies, this volume adds historical insights as well as cross cutting theoretical synthesis to these rapidly growing fields. This makes it essential reading for anyone interested in interrogating cultural representations of animals, landscapes, nature as well as the novel hybrids of our rapidly changing world. - Simon Dalby, Balsillie School of International Affairs, Wilfrid Laurier UniversityThis book combines two critical readings of popular culture ecocriticism and critical geopolitics toexplore the power of popular culture in framing the way we represent the world and morespecifically the relation between the human and the non-human. Dell’Agnese not only introducesthe foundations for an ecocritical geopolitics investigating how popular culture constructs andreveals environmental fields of meaning, she also skillfully guides the reader during an exhilaratingride through the dense landscapes of western popular culture, demonstrating an immense literaryand cinematic knowledge when presenting famous and less famous books/films/series to discussdifferent types of ecocritical geopolitical discourses. Dell’Agnese focuses on three types ofenvironmental discourses pertaining to landscapes of fear regarding (dystopian) futures, posthumanworlds, and carnism (the commonsensical attitude towards eating meat represented as "normal,natural, necessary and nice") respectively, to demonstrate the originality of ecocritical geopolitics.- Virginie Mamadouh, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands