This is a farewell.
2025 marked my tenth and final year curating the Theatre in the Age of Climate Change series for HowlRound. Like many things in my life, it began as a one-off project, with eight essays published in April 2015. Then, it quickly grew into a recurring series, published twice a year for the first several years, and once a year in the last few, with a break during the dark days of the COVID-19 pandemic.
My first essay reflected on the process of writing Sila and the challenge of relearning how to write plays that better captured the social and environmental disruptions facing Arctic communities. Through this experience, I grappled with fundamental questions about the intersection of theatre and the climate crisis: How do we do it? Why do we do it? Why does it matter? Then I, along with nearly seventy contributors from a dozen countries, spent the following decade trying to answer these questions. In the process, I broke up with Aristotle, got angry at the system, and, in 2018, co-organized a convening for approximately thirty artists with my colleagues Elizabeth Doud and Roberta Levitow through the HowlRound Challenge initiative. But what I have enjoyed most is hearing from other artists about their process, what they care about, what they struggle with, and what makes them get up in the morning—even or especially when it feels like the obstacles are insurmountable.
The variety of perspectives continues to inspire me. Just as there is no one way to write about race or gender or inequality, there is no one way to write about how theatre affects and is affected by our relationship to the climate crisis. Some writers focus on hope; others focus on community. Some search for courage, advocate for Native voices, or explore the concept of the artist citizen. Some envision possible futures or probe the intersections of disability and the environment or queerness and the environment. Some try to understand what it would feel like to see the world from the perspective of a bird, a koala, or a plant. And what they all have in common is a recognition that the status quo is no longer viable and that we need to rethink how we look at the world and ourselves within it.
Have things changed over the last ten years? Yes. For one thing, I feel less alone.
Have things changed over the last ten years? Yes. For one thing, I feel less alone. More theatre artists are engaging with the climate crisis, whether that means putting the topic front and center or simply letting it color the world their characters inhabit. More theatres are concerned about their environmental footprint and are taking steps to reduce it. In New York, Climate Week NYC featured more artistic offerings in 2025 than in any year since its launch in 2009. And on a larger scale, there have been sustained efforts to get policymakers to recognize the crucial role of culture in climate action. As an example, The Group of Friends for Culture-Based Climate Action, created in 2023 at COP28 in Dubai,
… advocates for recognition of cultural heritage, creative industries, and traditional and indigenous knowledge as essential tools for building resilience, sustainability, and identity in climate crisis contexts. With UNESCO's support as the Lead Knowledge Partner, the initiative represents an articulated effort to position culture as an indispensable dimension in global climate action.
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Chantal, thanks for all you have done with this series over the last ten years. I teach many of the articles from Theatre in the Age of Climate Change in my courses, in addition to plays from The Future Is Not Fixed. I appreciate everything you have done for eco-theater and look forward to reading more plays in The Arctic Cycle. Best of luck with the PhD program!