Skip to content
Mapping the Arts and Humanities
  • Home
  • Search
  • Map
  • Dashboard
  • Get involved
  • Blog
  • About us
  • Help
  • Login

Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (UK and Ireland) (ASLE-UKI)

Description

The Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (UK and Ireland) was founded in 1998. Its aim is to represent and support scholars and writers in the UK, Republic of Ireland, and beyond who are interested in the environment and its expression in the cultural imagination. The association provides a forum for ecocriticism, the environmental humanities, and cognate fields such as animal studies. Its members’ work explores the intricate relationships between human and nonhuman environments and creatures, today, in any historical period, and in a diverse range of cultural and geographical contexts. The Association is motivated by a commitment to ecologically progressive practices and politics, but, above all, it seeks to foster a spirit of open dialogue and intellectual curiosity about how nature, environment, and animals exist in our lives.

Offers funding

Yes, this infrastructure provides funding in the following categories:

  • Prizes

Founding year

1998

Contact details

United Kingdom
Website: https://asle.org.uk/
Public email: info@asle.org
  • @asleuk

On the map

This infrastructure is not shown on our map.

Not all infrastructures have physical locations to show on the map.

For example, many roving or virtual groups do not have stable addresses.

Categorisation

Type

  • Learned society or subject association
  • Association

Project Tags

  • Creative writing tag
  • Environmental humanities tag
  • Language tag
  • Literature tag

Last modified:

2023-10-17 18:07:28

Get involved

Help put UK arts and humanities research on the map.

Add your infrastructure
  • School of Advanced Study, University of London
  • Research England
  • Arts and Humanities Research Council

Mapping the Arts and Humanities is research commissioned by Research England and the Arts and Humanities Research Council.

  • Use our API
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Terms of use
  • Site map
Back to top
Website by Studio 24