Wrenched: Edward Abbey and The Monkey Wrench Gang on the Big Screen
The new film “Wrenched,” directed by ML Lincoln, explores the legacy of Edward Abbey as author and action-based environmentalist in the American southwest.
The new film “Wrenched,” directed by ML Lincoln, explores the legacy of Edward Abbey as author and action-based environmentalist in the American southwest.
Narayan Mahon’s photography explores the individual, local challenges of unrecognized statehood.
How do humans cope with disaster? Can ecologies recover after catastrophe? Five reflections on resilience in the aftermath of the Vietnam Wars.
Martin Blaser worries that “missing microbes” may be responsible for a whole host of modern ailments.
What can James Franco and a fossilized camera tell us about geology, labor, and objectivity?
Jennifer Colten’s photographs of wasteland environments challenge some of our deepest cultural values about nature and landscape.
Dan Barber’s “The Third Plate” resists the ethical pitfalls of farm-to-table dining, instead proposing an ethics of flavor to orient agriculture and its cuisine. What are the implications of a land and sea ethic guided by flavor?
Two new books in history and geography remind scholars to think on the large scale—both in time and space.
Dubai: The City as Corporation is a significant contribution within the field of urban studies in the Arabian Peninsula. Dubai is often represented in both popular and academic writings as the proto-type of a global city, a desert landscape decorated by non-contextual extravagances—architectural structures varying in the form of skyscrapers, shopping malls, and museums.