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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 5 (1): 287–290.
Published: 01 May 2014
... Review 44 (2008); Rob Nixon, Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2011). 13 Terry Tempest Williams, Finding Beauty in a Broken World 1st ed. (New York: Pantheon Books, 2008). 14 Libby Robin. “The End of the Environment...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2012) 1 (1): 123–140.
Published: 01 May 2012
...Alex Lockwood Abstract In the fiftieth year since the publication of Silent Spring, the importance of Rachel Carson's work can be measured in its affective influence on contemporary environmental writing across the humanities. The ground broken by Silent Spring in creating new forms of writing has...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2020) 12 (1): 179–185.
Published: 01 May 2020
...Alexandra Crosby; Jesse Adams Stein © 2020 Alexandra Crosby and Jesse Adams Stein 2020 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons license (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). We are surrounded by broken things and environments: 1 designed objects, spaces...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2021) 13 (1): 275–280.
Published: 01 May 2021
.... 21. VanderMeer, Annihilation ; Authority ; Acceptance . 22. Sperling, “Queer Ingestions.” 23. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, “Life in the Broken Places with Jeff VanderMeer.” 24. Gerlach, “Brief Word on Ethics,” 200 . 25. Brown, “Learning to Read the Great...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (2): 422–425.
Published: 01 July 2024
... and livelihoods. Dust, as Liane Pearce put it in her story of the broken ecology of Australia’s outback mining town Broken Hill, is “the land’s way of speaking back.” 12 And still, people cannot but go on living with the dust of their home ecologies—in “contaminated kinship.” Existential boundaries are being...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (2): 235–239.
Published: 01 November 2016
...” 4 of perpetual incorporation. Eating apples in the graveyard in the company of a wizened botanist, I was also given a more profound lesson in finitude. Waving a windfall apple, she traced the fruit’s possible molecular history—from subterranean human corpse, broken by bacteria, carried...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2020) 12 (2): 454–474.
Published: 01 November 2020
... of thinking fostered by modernity. Referencing Aldo Leopold and Alf Hornberg, Rose writes “if it takes a mountain to think long-term connectivity, it takes modernity to think of a mountain as a gravel pit, and to haul it away piece by broken piece.” 28 She argues that the logic of the fragmented gravel pit...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (2): 245–250.
Published: 01 November 2016
... suffering to the earth and the poor. But, he argues, at the heart of all these issues are broken relationships to God, neighbor, and Earth: a spiritual problem, to which he poses a likewise spiritual solution. Likely there will be much in this theological document that perturbs, if not flummoxes, even...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 284–291.
Published: 01 November 2023
... as raced. Gravity, as a set of forces, imposes spatial hierarchies and densities that define social conditions of falling and failing, as well as their counter-gravities of resistance. Jerry Zee takes up the idea of orogeny as an opening, a way of tracing fault lines, alongside N. K. Jemisin’s Broken...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 190–202.
Published: 01 November 2023
..., is a geotechnics of convergences, coincidences, and meetings that “[open] up fresh gaps in our understanding.” 28 The Broken Earth Trilogy has provoked reflections on racialization and climate crisis. 29 Jemisin’s orogenes offer a way of posing orogeny as an interface between social, political...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (1): 208–230.
Published: 01 March 2023
... to interpretation only deepens this public, intersubjective quality. The primary fictional texts I engage in this article are Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony , Nalo Hopkinson’s Brown Girl in the Ring , Naomi Novik’s Uprooted , and N. K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth trilogy ( The Fifth Season , The Obelisk Gate...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (3): 575–578.
Published: 01 November 2022
.... “Fossil-kin,” the Métis scholar Zoe Todd calls them. 16 Are they dead? Are they the dead? Do they hold us to account? Do they ask us, quietly, how to live with them? Smoke whirls, spiraling from the chimneys with the force of a broken seal as the combustible organic deposits catch fire...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2013) 3 (1): 1–24.
Published: 01 May 2013
... moment, easily broken by any unexpected movement, any sudden sound that might startle the flock and send them flying over the distant trees, elsewhere, into other fields. Attempting to suspend the moment, the birders conceal themselves, withdrawing from the possibility of a reciprocal gaze—reversing...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (1): 3–26.
Published: 01 May 2019
... on the edges of capitalism is living on the edge indeed, an anxious space between precarious presents and uncertain futures. 43 The broken gearbox invokes a literal “troubled transmission . . . an interruption within a transition,” 44 representing a breakdown in an improvised infrastructure...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (2): 256–262.
Published: 01 November 2016
... creaturely home. For Pope Francis and many other religious believers, this breakdown reflects a broken relationship with God, and he expresses shock at the complacent attitude shown toward degradation in the natural environment: “Obstructionist attitudes, even on the part of believers, can range from denial...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2020) 12 (1): 132–166.
Published: 01 May 2020
... In a genre that prioritizes order and the aerial gaze with claims to objectivity and neutrality, the employment of a diffractive aesthetics disrupts the authority of the map. As he notes, “The seas are fractured and like broken glass [or] broken mirrors, there are refractions and distortions.” 35...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2012) 1 (1): 7–21.
Published: 01 May 2012
... they are totally consistent yet can be broken, but because they are not consistent. They are afflicted with a necessary flaw, what in Greek tragedy is called a hamartia, the very flaw that supplies their virtue, their distinguishing characteristics. Oedipus is smart and compassionate, and these very factors...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 842–849.
Published: 01 November 2024
... examination of imperialism and environmental catastrophe in the Tierra del Fuego archipelago, is always paired with wonder in the Anthropocene. 27 And, we may add, what makes more-than-human heroes and villains especially fecund, in this dialectic of loss and wonder and in this “experience of brokenness...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (2): 457–474.
Published: 01 July 2022
... the new regulations ridiculous and contacted the forestry manager to ask for permission to continue their traditional practice of fetching firewood of broken branches in the birch forest. Their trips would be guided by attentive curiosity, assessing the effects of snowfall on tree structures, considering...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 107–128.
Published: 01 May 2018
... restoration effort. This watershed image and its peculiar history have led me to think about the ways in which both the landscape and its history are broken up and ruptured and the kinds of violence that these ruptures both mark and conceal. Figure 1. A sign at a rest stop near Marathon, NY, shows...
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