<p><em>Green and Blue Cartographies: Ecocritical and Oceanic Perspectives in the Age of the Anthropocene</em> brings together a rich constellation of contemporary scholarship that interrogates the ecological oceanic feminist and Indigenous dimensions of our planetary condition. With illuminating forewords by Prof. Steve Mentz and Dr Mohammed Muharram-two eminent voices in Blue Humanities and postcolonial ecocriticism-the volume stands at the confluence of environmental thought cultural memory and literary imagination.</p><p>In an era defined by climate emergency rising seas ecological precarity and rapid socio-cultural transformations this volume offers an expansive critical map of how literature culture and the humanities respond to and reimagine the Anthropocene. Traversing green terrains and blue expanses the essays collectively foreground the entanglements between land and water human and non-human tradition and futurity. Contributors engage a wide range of literary and cultural texts-spanning global Indian Indigenous and oceanic imaginaries-to illuminate how narratives of memory justice resilience and survival are shaped by ecological forces.</p><p>The collection charts diverse theoretical pathways: ecofeminism posthumanism postcolonial ecocriticism environmental ethics Blue Humanities ecogothic studies children's environmental literature and the politics of sustainability. It also probes the ocean as archive the river as witness and the Earth as a deeply storied organism marked by grief hope and resistance. Through its interdisciplinary reach and its commitment to bridging ecological and oceanic humanities the volume invites readers to rethink the Anthropocene beyond reductive binaries and towards more inclusive fluid and ethical cartographies.</p><p>Scholarly yet accessible <em>Green and Blue Cartographies</em> is an essential resource for researchers students and readers interested in environmental humanities literary studies cultural ecology and the evolving discourse of planetary futures.</p>