References
- Alacovska, Ana, and Macon Holt. “The Intertwinement of Speculative Fictions and Environmental Activism: Towards a Sensory Sociology of Climate Fiction.” The Sociological Review, vol. 71, no. 5, 2023, pp. 1095-1114.
- Andonova-Kalapsazova, Elena. “Motherhood – the Quiet Rebellion of Utopia in Megan Hunter’s The End We Start From.” Балканистичен Форум, vol. 33, no. 1, 2024, pp. 252-265.
- Brandt, Thomas, Marianne Dieterich, and Doreen Huppert. “Human Senses and Sensors from Aristotle to the Present.” Frontiers in Neurology, vol. 15, 2024, pp. 1-11.
- Bromhead, Helen. “Disaster Linguistics, Climate Change Semantics and Public Discourse Studies: A Semantically-enhanced Discourse Study of 2011 Queensland Floods.” Language Sciences, vol. 85, 2021, pp. 1-13.
- Della Bosca, Hannah. “Comfort in Chaos: A Sensory Account of Climate Change Denial.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, vol. 41, no. 1, 2023, pp. 170-187.
- Doyle, Richard. Deluge. Pan Books, 1976.
- ---. Flood. Random House, 2002.
- Falcone, Mariasophia. “Experiencing Climate Change: Phraseological Patterns of Perception Verbs in GenZ Climate Activism Online.” Status Quaestionis, vol. 27, 2024, pp. 51-71.
- Hawkins, Harriet, and Anja Kanngieser. “Artful Climate Change Communication: Overcoming Abstractions, Insensibilities, and Distances.” Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, vol. 8, no. 5, 2017, pp. 1-12.
- Hunter, Megan. The End We Start From. Picador, 2017.
- Kapranov, Oleksandr. “Between a Burden and Green Technology: Rishi Sunak’s Framing of Climate Change Discourse on Facebook and X (Twitter).” Information and Media, vol. 99, 2024, pp. 85-105.
- Kasurka, Mahinur G. “Going beyond Risk Society from an Affirmative Posthumanist Perspective in Sarah Hall’s The Carhullan Army and Megan Hunter’s The End We Start From.” Post-Millennial Cultures of Fear in Literature: Fear, Risk and Safety, edited by Mustafa Kirca and Adelheid Rundholz, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2024, pp. 44-65.
- Kelly, Matthew. “The Thames Barrier: Climate Change, Shipping and the Transition to a New Envirotechnical Regime.” Histories of Technology, the Environment and Modern Britain, edited by Jon Agar and Jacob Ward, UCL Press, 2018, pp. 206-29.
- Krysanova, Tetiana. “Unveiling the Eco-storytelling: Multimodal Layers of Meaning in Greenpeace’s Environmental Videos.” Cognition. Communication. Discourse, vol. 28, 2024, pp. 33-57.
- Manwaring, Kevan. Writing Ecofiction: Navigating the Challenges of Environmental Narrative. Springer Nature, 2024.
- McRobie, Allan, Tom Spencer, and Herman Gerritsen. “The Big Flood: North Sea Storm Surge.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, vol. 363, no. 1831, 2005, pp. 1263-1270.
- Nerlich, Brigitte, and Nelya Koteyko. “Carbon Reduction Activism in the UK: Lexical Creativity and Lexical Framing in the Context of Climate Change.” Environmental Communication, vol. 3, no. 2, 2009, pp. 206-223.
- O’Hara, Glen. “The Great Flood of 1953.” The Politics of Water in Post-War Britain, edited by Glen O’Hara, Palgrave Macmillan, 2017, pp. 55-84.
- O’Shea, Thomas E., and John Lewin. “Urban Flooding in Britain: An Approach to Comparing Ancient and Contemporary Flood Exposure.” Natural Hazards, vol. 104, no. 1, 2020, pp. 581-591.
- Pratolo, Bambang Widi, et al. “Eco-lexicons in ELT: Analyzing Environmental Narratives through Critical Discourse Analysis.” BIO Web of Conferences, vol. 148, 2024, pp. 1-11.
- Wilkinson, Alissa. “This Apocalypse Is Very, Very Wet.” The New York Times, 18 Jan. 2024, p. C6.
- Winter, Bodo. Sensory Linguistics: Language, Perception and Metaphor. John Benjamins, 2019.