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fossilized whale bone erected on a cliff

The Matter with Time

Monika Szuba

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colorful joss papers

Navigating Eco-Grief with Ancestral Grieving Practices

Guevara Han & Rae Jing Han

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A small fishing boat floats on a still, sunny morning sea, with large rocks in the foreground and ice glaciers behind.

“Buying Time,” and Other Charismatic Temporalities of Climate Change

Mark Carey

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Several giant tree trunks next to each other with a person in a red jacket facing the trunks and looking at them.

Plant Blindness and “Seeing” Vegetal Timescales

Katherine Cheung

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Painting of two ostriches

Reviews

October 24, 2017

 by Maura Capps · Published October 24, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

The Black Birders Who Made White Ornithologists Famous

Nancy Jacobs’ new book uncovers how African birders and vernacular birding knowledge helped build European imperial science.

An aerial photograph shows beachfront damage caused by Hurricane Irma in South Florida.

Checklists / Podcasts

October 19, 2017

 by The Editorial Board · Published October 19, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

After the Wind and the Rain: Making Sense of a Record Hurricane Season

Harvey, Irma, Maria. Why has there been so much damage, and what does it mean? A guide for reading helps make sense of disaster.

A picture of Gregory Cushman

Podcasts

October 17, 2017

 by Elizabeth Hennessy · Published October 17, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

The Fragile Society We’ve Built from Rocks: A Conversation With Gregory Cushman

Fertilizers, computers, gasoline, and other parts of our everyday lives come from irreplaceable deposits found in the Earth. But how long will they last?

The Wisconsin Idea in action. Byron Crouse (right), associate dean in the School of Medicine and Public Health at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, meets with Jim Fahey (left), the owner of Praireland Dairy near Belleville, Wisconsin. Crouse has helped to create Co-op Care, a program designed to increase the number of farmers and other rural business owners that have access to affordable health insurance programs with benefits that include preventative services. Photo by Bryce Richter, December 2008. Courtesy of UW–Madison University Communications. 

Essays

October 12, 2017

 by Kevin Walters · Published October 12, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Rural People and Academic Elites Saved Higher Education Once. They Can Do It Again.

Rural resentment is nothing new. When one university reckoned with it a century ago, it convinced farmers that the university worked for them—and improved itself in the process.

Painting by Theron Caldwell Ris captures the multispecies lifeways Heise envisions.

Reviews

October 10, 2017

 by Amy A. Free · Published October 10, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Ursula K. Heise Thinks Beyond Melancholy: A Review of “Imagining Extinction”

Extinction stories have a flavor, and it tastes like melancholy. A new book asks what different narratives we could bring to the table.

Essays

October 5, 2017

 by Emma Schroeder · Published October 5, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Ecological Homes: Making Women, Men, and Nature

At the New Alchemy Institute’s bioshelters, green technologies promised social revolution. But women still found themselves stuck with the dishes.

Chicken nuggets against a blue square background imposed in the upper-left corner of an image of a charred industrial kichen after a fire, run through with horizontal red stripes, suggests an image of the U.S. flag.

Podcasts

October 3, 2017

 by Nan Enstad · Published October 3, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

How’d We Get So Cheap? A Conversation with Bryant Simon

The author of “The Hamlet Fire” discusses a deadly blaze at a chicken-processing facility and the logics of cheapness which provided the kindling.

Crowd at opening ceremony at the Woodstock music festival, 1969

Checklists

September 28, 2017

 by Thomas Kivi · Published September 28, 2017 · Last modified November 11, 2021

An Environmental Playlist of the Twentieth Century

Take a trip through the twentieth century to explore the development of environmental themes through popular music.

Essays

September 26, 2017

 by Nina Finley · Published September 26, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Cottonwoods in Concrete: A Call for Collaborative Survival among Ruins

A forest sprouting from a levee in eastern Washington offers a model for flood management, if only we notice it.

A portrait of a young Napoleon Bonaparte in military dress starting at the viewer with a white mountain and blue clouds behind him.

Essays

September 21, 2017

 by Michael H. Feinberg · Published September 21, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Painting an Empire: Landscapes of Napoleon’s Dreams in Haiti

French landscape painting during the Haitian Revolution lays bare colonial concern for controlling both people and the environment.

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