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differentiation
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 590–602.
Published: 01 November 2024
... Commons license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). pattern naturecultures shimmer differentiation fielding Pattern in the Occidentalist West is undervalued, undertheorized, and overlooked. Human cultures bestow patterns with histories and meanings while demanding its delimitation. 1 Western dogma...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2021) 13 (1): 245–263.
Published: 01 May 2021
...James L. Smith Abstract This article explores the nature of remembering as a lake, with a lake, or through a lake; the differential relationships, knowledge, and perspectives contained within; and the potentially troubling implications found at the intersection of scientific and humanistic...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 52–64.
Published: 01 November 2023
... experience in relation to climate change, where it cannot be sustained as the crisis that it is, instead blends into a background anxiety. I argue that waiting (for adequate policies, for climate relief) is felt differentially across the globe but that it also might provide a pause to recommit to climate...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 7 (1): 169–190.
Published: 01 May 2016
..., we explore the ways in which western and Inuit cosmologies differentially inform particular relationships with the inhuman, and ‘trash animals' in particular. We argue that waste and wasting exist within a complex set of historically embedded and contemporaneously contested neo-colonial structures...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 5 (1): 35–53.
Published: 01 May 2014
... these two kinds of poems might be clarified by differentiating between ecophenomenological and environmental ecopoetry. We argue that recognition of this difference reflects a broader interdisciplinary development in our understanding of the environment as a social category, and that recognising it more...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (1): 57–76.
Published: 01 May 2016
... the visceral vectors, cycles, and assemblages through which people are differentially entangled, disentangled, and reentangled with helminths. It then analyses these entanglements with reference to literature on the science and politics of (auto)immunity. The article places helminth therapy in the vanguard...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 235–250.
Published: 01 November 2023
... caused not only mountain building and increased volcanism but also the lowering of the ocean floors and complementary movements that catalyzed the warming of environments and sped up biological differentiation and diversification. In his view, these periods corresponded with the roughly 250-million-year...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 284–291.
Published: 01 November 2023
...Kathryn Yusoff [email protected] © 2023 Kathryn Yusoff 2023 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). Understanding geology as a medium of struggle that defines differentiated relations and changes of state...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (1): 24–36.
Published: 01 May 2016
... of descent and filiation, be it about species, disciplines, or technics.” According to her, involution creates, between heterogeneous critters, a relation that brings into play their hereditary identity, that is, “the ways they ‘naturally’ differentiate themselves from each other.” 25 We choose the term...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 4 (1): 113–123.
Published: 01 May 2014
... lying listless on the bottom of its tank. By 5pm No. 1 was dead. 2 No.1's captivity and death captures the themes addressed by this special section: the awkwardness of being together in multispecies entanglements; the differential vulnerability that both precedes and is reshaped by being drawn...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (2): 501–506.
Published: 01 November 2019
... and violent imperceptibility of differential differences, explicitness is not an option but an ethical imperative. Why the absence? I’m not sure. It wasn’t the lack of women in our experiment that prevented us from raising the connections between the Anthropocene and patriarchy. And I’m sure it wasn’t that we...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 7 (1): 265–270.
Published: 01 May 2016
... histories, 6 who or what generates events. 7 To encounter is to trouble classification. Speciated reason, its categorizations of bodies, has long proceeded through burdened conflations with race. Taxonomies treat taxa as existents, ‘out there,’ to be found, compared, differentiated, grouped...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2012) 1 (1): 57–68.
Published: 01 May 2012
... to differentiate much more than ‘sweet’ and ‘fetid’” but with the assistance of the expertly arranged odours and with technical training, they “discriminate more and more subtle differences”, “able to tell [each smell] apart from one another, even when they are masked by or mixed with others.” 21 He remarks...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (1): 180–193.
Published: 01 May 2019
... the much-maligned subject/object dualism has been overcome. Crude differentiation may be resolved either into finer differences or into indifference and undifferentiation. The crudeness of the subject/object relation is now replaced with a disorderly collection of -jects, often paleonymically termed...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2021) 13 (1): 21–44.
Published: 01 May 2021
... connects, however, it also demarcates and differentiates. The contradictory affordances of connection and differentiation can emerge from the same line: it can connect in one move while dividing in another. For example, the timeline in “From the Earth to the Sky” illustrates the continuities between fossil...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (1): 261–264.
Published: 01 March 2024
.... It illuminates how “one is always with other bodies in a fleshy sociality” through “the social differentiation between bodily others.” 5 In Wangechi Mutu’s “Homeward Bound,” speculative Black feminine bodies materialize as collages of matter, animals, and machines. 6 Skin indexes the kaleidoscopic...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 219–234.
Published: 01 November 2023
... within a much deeper planetary history or paleogeography in this way foregrounds the earth’s own capacity to transform and self-differentiate—to become other to itself, with or without human influence. 23 These claims remain contested, and even their advocates readily concede that understandings...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 4 (1): 195–205.
Published: 01 May 2014
... and agriculture. Understood this way we might take awkwardness as an index of alterity (though not incommensurability) in relation to human anatomy, ecology and wellbeing. These ecological and anatomical characteristics are differentially valued within a diversity of social and cultural representations...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 7 (1): 129–132.
Published: 01 May 2016
... and maintain a separate cultural domain for humans that differentiates us from nature, and hence from other animals. Drawing upon stories from their multispecies ethnography within a west coast Canadian childcare centre and in an urban mountain forest setting, Pacini-Ketchabaw and Nxumalo consider...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (2): 447–472.
Published: 01 November 2018
... of ethologists regarding the capacities of nonhuman animals for tool use, language, reason, digital dexterity, and other traits once considered exceptional to the human, is often a starting point in countering the perpetual differentiation of culture from the realm of animal kind. Relatedly, an ever burgeoning...
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