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Journal Article
English Language Notes (2016) 54 (2): 201–203.
Published: 01 September 2016
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2017) 55 (1-2): 101–112.
Published: 01 March 2017
... not as distant bodies but as entities perpetually in orbit? Juliana Spahr's "Unnamed Dragonfly Species" (2002) invites this perspective.2 The prose poem dramatizes the stings of climate data so readily available to privileged, screen-bound Americans. It also entertains strategies for soothing or numbing those...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2020) 58 (1): 111–131.
Published: 01 April 2020
... to the Prehistory, Biogeography, Domestication, and Evolution of Maize , edited by Staller John E. , Tykot Robert H. , and Benz Bruce F. , 529 – 38 . Burlington, MA : Academic , 2006 . Ontario Ministry of the Environment , Conservation and Parks . Species at Risk . March 30 , 2019...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2003) 40 (3): 38–49.
Published: 01 March 2003
... thought characterized the natural o rd er as a static entity composed of a hierarchy of species, Linnaeus, Buffon, and Erasmus Darwin speculated about the possibility of 40 English Language Notes species m utation and ultimately that all life em anated from a com mon origin, an idea which Bartram clearly...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2017) 55 (1-2): 53–60.
Published: 01 March 2017
..., for example, tha t the 1973 Endangered Species A ct states th a t one of the key reasons endangered species ought to be protected is their "[ajesthetic value."4 Elsewhere, Ned Hettinger cites the U.S. Fish and W ildlife's request tha t a hospital project in Southern California move its developm ent plans due...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2017) 55 (1-2): 61–69.
Published: 01 March 2017
... of power back to the earth: the human is re naturalized as a species uniquely and uniform ly capable and responsible for changing the climate, and is thereby absolved of any such responsibility. Climate change becomes the JONES / PARKER 63 result of entirely natural human behavior, rooted...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2013) 51 (1): 19–33.
Published: 01 March 2013
... to the other side? How long can it put off that eventuality, how long can it hold on to its fractional species membership, before being relegated once and for all to a much lower rung o f the taxonom ic hierarchy? The very nature of "hum anness" seems to hangs in the balance here our place in the animate...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2019) 57 (1): 37–50.
Published: 01 April 2019
... Ocean. 6 This is to perform a gesture of what Gayatri Spivak calls “planetarity,” which is to inhabit the planet as “the species of alterity” by effecting the “defamiliarization of familiar space.” 7 While the sea is essentially alien to humans, 8 the Southern Ocean is particularly so...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2017) 55 (1-2): 89–99.
Published: 01 March 2017
... of the history and contours of modern environmental memory.1 I. Some Hazards First, Anthropocene as oxygen-sucker, from w hich standpoint anthropogenic clim ate change looms up as the defining environm ental crisis, reducing the others to satellite status: species extin ction , habitat loss, food and fresh w...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2017) 55 (1-2): 143–152.
Published: 01 March 2017
... eria lism .5 These various works that travel under the broad umbrella of political ecology,6 did not employ the new conceptual apparatus of vital m ateriality, object-oriented ontology, m ulti-species ethnography, or the m ore-than-hum an and I recognize th a t language shapes w h a t is thinkable...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2024) 62 (1): 30–47.
Published: 01 April 2024
..., the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, and more, to generate cross-species modes of “identification with” marine mammals. 11 I take seriously the Māori scholar Alice Te Punga Somerville’s insight that ocean studies scholarship tends to foreground the Atlantic, with the Pacific on the periphery. 12 Still, I would...
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Journal Article
English Language Notes (2020) 58 (1): 9–20.
Published: 01 April 2020
... Mega-buildup. ” Asia-Pacific Journal 8 , no. 19 ( 2010 ): 1 – 17 . apjjf.org/-Gwyn-Kirk--LisaLinda-Natividad/3356/article.pdf . Nilsson Greta . Endangered Species Handbook . Washington, DC : Animal Welfare Institute , 2005 . Pascua Jay Baza . “ Chachalåni. ” Platte Valley...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2019) 57 (1): 96–115.
Published: 01 April 2019
... intimacies between humans, and between humans and nonhuman species. Seeing water as an active participant in mediating intimacies and creating pleasure—a third party, perhaps—heightens the stakes of queer ecocriticism. Alongside new materialist scholarship, we look to water’s participation in the sexual...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2012) 50 (1): 247–251.
Published: 01 March 2012
... horizontalized e cological re la tio n s am o n g real e ntities, the cause o f th e h yp e ro b je ct rem a in s co lle ctive hum an action. "H yp e ro b je cts" such as oil spills and clim ate change, in other w ords, illu m i nate the profound difference that humans, at the species level, represent...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2004) 41 (3): 66–73.
Published: 01 March 2004
...). In the sometimes violent and always merciless world of Darwinian and Spencerian existence, the weaker must ever be forced to the wall by the stronger. The inferior species must ultimately give way to the superior, and the old must bow to the new, so that, in the end, no species can exist forever not tyrannosaurs...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2017) 55 (1-2): 33–40.
Published: 01 March 2017
... ll-th ro ttle by this neuro chem ical, is nonproductive and is mapped out expertly in Bruce Begamihl's w ork, Biological Exuberance.8 Other biologists like Joan Roughgarden, Marlene Zuk and Nathan Bailey also document queer nonproductive sexual exuberance across a bewildering array of species...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2009) 47 (2): 95–107.
Published: 01 September 2009
... to be science, but ends up, accidentally, alm ost as art. But w hy "alm ost"? Most literary critics keep intention- ality at arm's length. If we do so, m ight we not understand pseudoscience as an accidental but legitimate species of art?This, in fact, is my premise. We should be open to the possi bility...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2019) 57 (1): 152–159.
Published: 01 April 2019
... and varied species of plants and animals” (1). Wohl’s book is an accessible foray into both the ecological processes of large rivers and their history with modification by humans. She is not an environmental historian and admits that she does not delve into the social and cultural histories of the riverine...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2010) 48 (2): 153–161.
Published: 01 September 2010
.... Jurisdiction tends to be assumed and is not generally an explicit issue except where it is contested. I w ill argue that if we currently face a species of challenge or contest over ju ris dictions, it is one that m im ics in inverted form the last great battle over the boundaries of legal powers...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2017) 55 (1-2): 71–79.
Published: 01 March 2017
... or other single celled organisms would be viewed as an im poverishm ent of our evolutionary heritage despite containing a greater number of species. Or consider resilience: as C. S. Holling (1996) points out, there are tw o kinds of resilience: engineering and ecological.7 The engineering variety indicates...
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