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blame
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 746–765.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Viola Schreer Abstract This article examines the relationship between willful blindness and structures of blame by exploring how Ngaju Dayak villagers in Indonesia’s province of Central Kalimantan deal with the discourses, knowledge, and politics of blame that have emerged around the region’s...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 784–806.
Published: 01 November 2024
... of blame for the contemporary climate crisis, influencing international policy and inspiring a range of technological and economic fixes to construct “climate cattle” as keystone species for a “good Anthropocene.” Interventions are centered on bovine metabolisms at different spatial and temporal scales...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 842–849.
Published: 01 November 2024
..., “Heroes and Villains in the Anthropocene,” seek to do or call for. Examining an impressive range of cases across the globe, this collection aims to make more-than-human heroes and villains “serve as diagnostic lenses” for examining practices of blame, responsibility, victimhood, and salvationism...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2021) 13 (1): 272–274.
Published: 01 May 2021
... vector came to stand in for an explanation and thus offered a way of blaming something racialized, far off, and exotic for something more unexceptional, which is to say, systemic. In the past and during the COVID-19 pandemic, blame for the spread of a novel virus fell on poachers who hunt the vector...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 697–708.
Published: 01 November 2024
... lenses onto wider, often dichotomizing, discourses and politics of blame, accountability, victimhood, redemption, and salvation in the contemporary moment. Our second task, then, is to interrogate and disrupt such inculpatory and salvific logics, asking who/what benefits—and suffers—from their enactment...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2017) 9 (2): 456–459.
Published: 01 November 2017
..., alive and unwell: because this perceived separation is blamed for all manner of ills. An example: in the popular best seller Last Child in the Woods , author Richard Louv blames many human maladies on a “nature deficit disorder” in children who are disconnected from nature. 6 In response, policy...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 807–825.
Published: 01 November 2024
... and racialized narratives of causation and blame can be detected, Sowa Rigpa physicians approached COVID-19 largely on their own terms. 13 Apart from humoral and thermal medical theories of balance and invasion, the articulation of spectral revenge drew creatively on regional histories that contain echoes...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (2): 256–262.
Published: 01 November 2016
... the most ardent religious faith. The cry in this case is not simply hopelessness but also a cry of intense anger against God—the God of love, goodness, and justice. Pope Francis refuses to allow God to be blamed in this way and sees the Church’s role as protecting humanity from self-destruction (§79...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2017) 9 (1): 18–39.
Published: 01 May 2017
...—could be blamed for the disaster remained a point of debate. After all, cyclones, like landslides, have been part of life in the hills since long before the Gorkhaland agitation. At one GJMM “cultural program” held in the aftermath of Aila, a leader of an ethnic samaj (organization) put it this way...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2015) 6 (1): 159–165.
Published: 01 May 2015
... or whatever name we can still use without apoplexy, hear neo-imperialism, neo-liberalism, misogyny, and racism (who can blame them?) in the “Not Babies” part of “Make Kin Not Babies.” We imagine that the “Make Kin” part is easier and ethically and politically on firmer ground. Not true! “Make Kin...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2021) 13 (2): 301–322.
Published: 01 November 2021
..., “Scientists Study the Starling Invasion” ; Zielinski, “The Invasive Species We Can Blame on Shakespeare.” For journalism, see Taft, “European Starling, The Bard’s Bird” ; Pancake, “A Day of Starling Revelations.” For science writers, see Cocker, Birds and People , 460–63 ; Haupt, Mozart’s Starling...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 725–745.
Published: 01 November 2024
... in the sixteenth century, they were blamed for terrible calamities. 30 Seventeenth-century elites, too, purportedly rejected the potato as a poisonous root whose subterranean existence indicated a devilish provenance. However, exceptional possibilities for propagation coupled with a subterranean existence...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (1): 141–163.
Published: 01 March 2023
... of the river to engage in illicit coca cultivation and intensive cattle ranching was also to blame for the Mandur’s current conditions. Their initial reaction to the river’s sedimentation was to present a handwritten petition to the mayor and the regional environmental authority, Corpoamazonia. During...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 226–240.
Published: 01 May 2018
... “unprecedented” was investigated by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). See Sullivan and Gomes Da Cruz, “Four Years On.” Every major newspaper carried the argument regarding “greenies” and resistance to clearing for bushfire prevention. See, e.g., Lunn, “Greenies Blamed...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (3): 602–617.
Published: 01 November 2022
... of this barren blooming I attribute to a false system of education, gathered from the books written on this subject by men. 10 In turn, Wollstonecraft was blamed for the “unsexing” of such female “flowers” by the likes of country clergyman Richard Polwhele, who held both feminism and the study of botany...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 826–841.
Published: 01 November 2024
...]. Although it is forbidden, they also grow avocado uphill. The butterfly has no home. I do not have a home either. Our land is protected, but somehow, I log it now. I am disgusted with myself. Others are too. They call us names. They blame us for this catastrophe. They say we are all becoming narcos...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (2): 291–297.
Published: 01 November 2016
... is performed is political: any prematurely unified global anthropos as a subject of blame or praise is disaggregated by the discourse of climate justice into the beneficiaries and victims of combined and uneven global development (§51–52); furthermore, powerful groups within society distort facts and due...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 7 (1): 89–105.
Published: 01 May 2016
... that contaminated coyote urine was to blame for Hanford's radioactive telephone poles. She tells me about the atomic tumbleweeds that drink contaminated groundwater and then roll away with their toxic burden, and the radioactive mice and rabbits who spread Cesium-laced 3 droppings across vast areas of the site...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (1): 168–186.
Published: 01 March 2023
... conjured in order to attribute causation and inspire action. Questions like “What is triggering this mass extinction event?” “Who is to blame?” and “How can we act?” have become ubiquitous across recent public and mediatized interventions into the biodiversity crisis. But when answers are offered...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2020) 12 (2): 431–453.
Published: 01 November 2020
.../human bodies while also effectively dehumanizing the response—by despatializing and dehistoricizing the body and invisibilizing inequities. This allows institutionalized policy approaches to health to individualize illness and disease as a project of self-vigilant care and/or objectifying blame...
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