“Somewhere That’s Green”: Little Shop of Horrors and the Man-Eating Lawns of Cairo
What a musical about a man-eating plant can tell us about Egypt’s disastrous desert development.
What a musical about a man-eating plant can tell us about Egypt’s disastrous desert development.
Advocates of small government have a long and uncharted history within US environmentalism, argues Brian Drake in an interview about his recent book.
June 2015 recommendations from the Edge Effects editorial board.
California’s current drought offers an occasion for rethinking how our relationship to the past can help us confront crisis.
In the Anthropocene, or “age of humans,” maps open up important but complicated spaces of dialogue about the “human imprint” on earth systems.
Markets have become increasingly popular for enacting conservation goals, but they challenge us to consider our relationship to nature in new ways.
Places of burial allow for public recognition of the dead, but also invoke specific forms of official memory, offering a frame for imagining citizenship.
The Edge Effects editorial board introduces a new Editor-At-Large and shares our May 2015 recommendations.
In which we announce two new editors and move to a summer publication schedule.
In the former colonial hill station of Darjeeling, claims of belonging reveal the paradoxes of living in a place built for someone else.