Skip Nav Destination
Close Modal
Search Results for
fire
Update search
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
NARROW
Format
Subjects
Journal
Article Type
Date
Availability
1-20 of 130 Search Results for
fire
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account
Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
1
Sort by
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 746–765.
Published: 01 November 2024
... recurrent peat fires. Since these fires cause regional air pollution, detrimental health effects, tremendous economic costs, and environmental impact on a global scale, the search for fire villains takes center stage. However, as this article shows, the causes of fires are basically unknowable. Not only do...
Image
in Encounters in Borderlands: Borderlining Animals and Technology at Frankfurt Airport
> Environmental Humanities
Published: 01 November 2019
Figure 8. Animal tool kit at the fire department of Frankfurt Airport. Courtesy of the authors.
More
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (2): 341–360.
Published: 01 July 2022
... fires raging in the territory known as the Land of Fires, between the provinces of Naples and Caserta, in southern Italy. Thinking with the sprouting intersection of environmental humanities and disability justice, while rooted in a critical environmental justice and transfeminist standpoint...
Image
Published: 01 May 2018
Figure 1. Metal puddle formerly a lawn mower, in the wake of the Black Saturday fires. April 2009. Photo by author
More
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 86–106.
Published: 01 May 2018
...Vasiliki Touhouliotis Abstract Six years after the cease-fire that halted the 2006 war between Lebanon and Israel, southern Lebanese indicted the remains of Israel’s weapons for contaminating their lands, stunting their crops, and making them sick. Against local and international discourses...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 226–240.
Published: 01 May 2018
...Figure 1. Metal puddle formerly a lawn mower, in the wake of the Black Saturday fires. April 2009. Photo by author ...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 273–294.
Published: 01 May 2018
... of Europe’s perhaps not-so-singular eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Industrial Revolution gaining a full appreciation. But from a pyrotechnical perspective, the relatively recent arrival of fossil hydrocarbon-combusting heat engines builds on a lineage of chambered fire that reaches back at least as far...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (2): 367–370.
Published: 01 July 2022
...) created a new warning category: “fire tornado.” 1 Heat from the fires created powerful updrafts that drew in colder air, creating intensely hot burning vortexes. Disturbing events like this are becoming increasingly commonplace during the climate crisis. However, the climate crisis includes more than...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (2): 401–418.
Published: 01 July 2022
... for the most basic kind of inference. Here too, albeit on a more virtual plane, there is a shape-like logic. Learning to see that smoke points to fire, for instance, requires a prior imaginative step in which smoke-and-fire already form part of a single image; its unitary nature gives it a shape. Grasping...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2021) 13 (1): 224–244.
Published: 01 May 2021
.../opinion/australia-fires-climate-change.html . Haas John D. “ Making It on This Planet .” Educational Forum 41 , no. 2 ( 1977 ): 189 – 98 . doi.org/10.1080/00131727709336233 . Haraway Donna . “ Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin .” Environmental...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 842–849.
Published: 01 November 2024
... actors that render Ngaju Dayak farmers into climate/environmental villains, and on the other, Indigenous approaches according to which peat fires “are largely a matter of injustice emerging from a deeply engrained institutional blindness, its power imbalances and structural inequalities shaping...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 697–708.
Published: 01 November 2024
... with “climate cows,” exemplary tubers, unreadable spirit guardians, and untraceable peat fires (among others), heroes and villains are always relationally constituted and transformed through multiple ideas, agencies, practices, and politics. As such, they are inevitably fragile and contingent entities, composed...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (2): 321–340.
Published: 01 July 2022
... driving deforestation, soil depletion, mass death of pollinators, fires, droughts, floods, rising global temperatures, and pandemics—events that could combine to collapse global food systems. 28 In this context CSA programs in Brazil were touted as achieving “miraculous” results. 29 Between 2004...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 643–660.
Published: 01 November 2024
... appetite for power with this highly improbable material. Fossil energy was once seen as a Promethean gift to humankind (or to some at least), fire stolen from the gods that freed people from the limits and occasional tyranny of the solar system. Coal-rich western Europe is underlain by a band...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 8 (1): 143–148.
Published: 01 May 2016
... of carbon through wildfires into the atmosphere, thus accelerating the global warming that partially caused the forest’s demise in the first place, a classic positive feedback loop responsible for the fact that the thirty largest fires on record in Colorado have all occurred since 1996, coincident...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2022) 14 (1): 29–48.
Published: 01 March 2022
... their relationship to fire, instead. Smokers are nearly continually shown around fire, with fighter pilots even lighting up cigarettes mid-battle. Unfortunately for them, the new reality is not a fire world. Their fiery elemental bodies and avowed distance from the water surrounding them spell destruction...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 213–225.
Published: 01 May 2018
... destructive bushfire that swept through southeastern Australia in 2009. Combing through the remnants of shattered lives and a blackened landscape, she encounters a metal puddle: a lawnmower melted by the fire’s fierce heat. Testimony from other residents shows that leftover domestic items, from pottery...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (1): 180–193.
Published: 01 May 2019
.... To add fuel to the fire, the work of mourning metaphysics, ongoing since the nineteenth century, has been not just paused but brusquely terminated. In exchange for metaphysics and for mourning it, we endure a narcissistic reopening of the wound that is a global melancholia. The business...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (2): 247–279.
Published: 01 November 2019
...Figure 8. Animal tool kit at the fire department of Frankfurt Airport. Courtesy of the authors. ...
FIGURES
| View All (9)
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (1): 152–173.
Published: 01 May 2019
... that were made of it thrown into a blazing fire, . . . and after the stains were burnt out, come forth from the flames whiter and cleaner than they could possibly have been rendered by the aid of water.” 10 Though he mistakenly identifies the provenance of the material as growing “in the deserts of India...
FIGURES
| View All (7)
1