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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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Crumpled sign that reads "Water is Unfit for Human Consumption"

Commentary / Fieldnotes

April 6, 2017

 by Jake Blanc · Published April 6, 2017 · Last modified October 9, 2021

A Syllabus for Teaching Water Politics

A new syllabus outlines a series of readings for teaching the politics of water.

The City of Chicago / sketched & drawn on stone by Parsons & Atwater. https://www.loc.gov/item/90715977/

Podcasts

April 4, 2017

 by Patrick T. Reardon · Published April 4, 2017 · Last modified March 23, 2022

Nature’s Metropolis Turns 25: A Conversation with William Cronon

An urban history nearly devoid of people nonetheless holds lessons for communal human life today.

The camp at Standing Rock. Photo by Larry Nesper, November 2016.

Essays

March 30, 2017

 by Larry Nesper · Published March 30, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Loaves and Fishes at Standing Rock

A senior scholar of North American indigenous history visits the Oceti Sakowin camp and finds cause for hope. Up to a point.

A photograph of Jedediah Purdy, taken by Brian Hamilton, March 2017.

Podcasts

March 28, 2017

 by Adam Mandelman · Published March 28, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Politics for a Maimed World: A Conversation with Jedediah Purdy

The acclaimed cultural critic and author of “After Nature” set off to explore the uncharted depths of the Anthropocene. But he found Thoreau there waiting for him.

Reviews

March 16, 2017

 by Peter Boger · Published March 16, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Humility and Hubris: A Review of Luc Jacquet’s “Ice and the Sky”

Even with the impacts of the Anthropocene, it would be hubristic not to realize that ice and sky will far outlast anything so puny as humanity.

Fieldnotes

March 14, 2017

 by Leif Fredrickson · Published March 14, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Suburban Commuters, Urban Polluters

The migration of African Americans to cities and the rise of a commuter culture in the suburbs were shaped by one transformative technology: the automobile.

A portrait of Dr. Tyrone Hayes. Photo by Brian Hamilton, February 17, 2017.

Podcasts

March 9, 2017

 by Kate Ivancic · Published March 9, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Learning from Einstein and Tupac: A Conversation with Tyrone Hayes

The biologist who became famous standing up to agribusiness reflects on the politics of science, getting mistaken for a conspiracy theorist, and the unexpected ways race and gender matter in the academy today.

Life-sized diorama of ice age megafauna trapped in a salt lick at Big Bone Lick. Photo by the author.

Essays

March 7, 2017

 by Julia Dauer · Published March 7, 2017 · Last modified October 9, 2021

Creationism, Mastodons, and Natural History in Kentucky

In northern Kentucky, conflicting stories about natural history mirror the religious and scientific debates of the late eighteenth century.

Fieldnotes

March 2, 2017

 by Anne Pringle · Published March 2, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

Global Environmental Change in Indonesia: A Roundtable

Indonesian is known both for biodiversity and environmental degradation. This tension resonates with the stories we tell about global environmental change.

U.S.-Mexico border fence near El Paso, Texas

Checklists

February 28, 2017

 by Carl Sack · Published February 28, 2017 · Last modified October 12, 2019

What Eight Waves of Migration Can Tell Us About Human-Environment Relationships

Immigration is often driven by environmental change, and immigrants themselves often change the landscapes they come to inhabit when they arrive. Examining the geographic history of past immigrants and refugees can inform present debates.

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