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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 5 (1): 13–33.
Published: 01 May 2014
..., present, and future. The “time” of these scientific figures is one in which the present has extra potential, where the present is the hinge on which everything hangs. If the potential in the present moment can be grasped, then maybe, just maybe, the present can be held open enough to make a space...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (1): 239–241.
Published: 01 May 2019
... of colonialism and capitalism, scramble conventional understandings of time, agency, and ontological categorization. Sasha Litvintseva, for example, grapples with the temporality of asbestos, noting the “unfolding of the deferred yet certain effects of asbestos on the toxic body and the unpayable debt owed...
Image
Published: 01 May 2015
Figure 7. An estuary-shaped life, with the Severn bridges as timespace fulcrums (from a personal Google map). More
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 107–128.
Published: 01 May 2018
... that seem to change the course of history. I suggest that the intersection of temporal and spatial relationships embedded within the watershed concept reveals the interaction between modernist conceptions of space and time, enabling the persistence of trauma and violence that characterizes modernity...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2017) 9 (2): 255–279.
Published: 01 November 2017
.... By interspersing a story of humans and machines with insect life, Butler pointed to a broad imaginative web of interspecies and machinic relationships. Contemporary artists Pierre Huyghe, Ann Lislegaard, and Hayden Fowler use video and installation art to explore interspecies relationships in time and space...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 5 (1): 217–232.
Published: 01 May 2014
... time by movements within space, and thus it is not coincidental that the book that is credited as one of the most powerful representations of the Anthropocene resembles an atlas. In this resemblance, however, it also reproduces the abstract and generalized space of cartography. The atlas allows, as I...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (1): 25–43.
Published: 01 March 2023
...Alessandra Marino Abstract The New Space Age is awash with discourses about space colonization and resource exploitation, and these happily coexist with the age-old and curiosity-driven question, “Are we alone in the universe?” Astrobiology addresses this question and, at the same time, codifies...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2017) 9 (2): 359–377.
Published: 01 November 2017
... time, by offering an exaggerated example of the ways astronauts during space travel were (and are) in reality wholly reliant upon a host of technical systems for survival, the bioregenerative system points to the ways that this history not only could have been otherwise but was otherwise: the human...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (2): 324–350.
Published: 01 November 2019
... of “lines of flight” in the city. 2 If urban environments can tend to territorialize and homogenize space, at the same time, lines of flight point to latent possibilities for deterritorializing the city and making other things possible. 3 These projects perch on the edge between suggesting another...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2021) 13 (2): 391–413.
Published: 01 November 2021
... environment of the landscape painting is doomed to failure. The lifecycle of these plants is frozen in time, their habitat is the clinical space of the museum. The artificial ecosystem of the gallery delimits our experience, confined to the visual at the expense of the other senses and restricting even our...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2013) 2 (1): 147–167.
Published: 01 May 2013
... we view the utterly versatile and culturally creative Aborigines who sustained themselves through persistent ice-age droughts in the central Australian deserts from fifty thousand years earlier? 54 What is at stake is more than space but also time. There is, of course, the Braudelian long...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2017) 9 (2): 398–417.
Published: 01 November 2017
... of Antarctica and outer space, and to reflect on emerging modes of an extraterrestrial mode of thinking Earth. This article is informed by short-term ethnographic fieldwork in the Antarctic Peninsula with Chilean microbiologists engaged in the bioprospecting of extremophiles, to account for how extremophile...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 295–309.
Published: 01 May 2018
... the landscape of East Anglia as a social space, this article explores how the coeval quality of the longue durée of deep time, and the haunting rupture entailed by the prospect of our own mortality, can enchant, rather than blunt, our sense of human responsibility in the Anthropocene. Rather than blunting...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 4 (1): 19–39.
Published: 01 May 2014
... in a spill of layered sediments – each layer of particulate a temporary resting place for a forceful trajectory of matter spurned into motion elsewhere in space and time. This paper takes up the atemporal matter of this coal ash flood to ask: out of what movements and connections was the ash formed? How did...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 174–189.
Published: 01 November 2023
... between racialized forms of othering and planetary scales of time, space, and materiality. As a mode of earthly praxis, geosocial solidarity is what might come after the unfinished task of detangling distributed forms of violence in the Anthropocene. Figure 1. A field of plastic boxes storing shale...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2023) 15 (3): 119–139.
Published: 01 November 2023
... because of its all-inclusiveness. It is both body and surrounding environment. It occupies space and time but is neither here nor there, now nor then. It is always in a state of becoming. Soil is the place where all other spheres and stages and scenes merge into one: the dynamic interface between...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2014) 5 (1): 261–276.
Published: 01 May 2014
... of the environmental crisis. It might finally allow such work to attain the critical mass it needs to break out of customary disciplinary confines and reach a wider public, at a time when natural scientists have begun to acknowledge that an understanding of the environmental crisis must include insights from...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 150–170.
Published: 01 May 2018
... and plumage from related seabirds used in contemporary auk reconstructions. The reanimated great auk lives to tell stories of ethographic entanglement and continues, through its presence in museum spaces, to provoke both thought and action in a time of unprecedented numbers of species extinctions. © 2018...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2025) 17 (1): 223–234.
Published: 01 March 2025
... by Fornillo Bruno , 15 – 21 . Buenos Aires : El Colectivo /CLACSO/IEALC, 2019 . Gudynas Eduardo . Extractivisms: Politics, Economy, and Ecology . New York : Columbia University Press , 2021 . Hein Carola . “ Space, Time, and Oil: The Global Petroleumscape .” In Oil Spaces...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2016) 7 (1): 265–270.
Published: 01 May 2016
..., the manner in which they apprehend and sense the world, in space-time rhythms that are different, but not entirely cleaved, from our own. 18 Such a proposition strikes at the heart of cartographic ‘inversions' that run deep within the colonial project: 19 that building precedes dwelling...
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