Announcing the Edge Effects Podcast
Check out our new podcast series, just in time for holiday travel!
Check out our new podcast series, just in time for holiday travel!
Stressing intimacy, structures of power, social justice, and action, food studies is giving interdisciplinarity a good name.
A geologist turned award-winning writer reflects on the marks racism has left on the American landscape.
A conversation about labor: labor on tea plantations, the labor of language, and the ways in which the Anthropocene invites labor-focused inquiry.
A conversation with geographer Scott Kirsch about what we mean when we talk about technology, and how we can understand the relationship between language and environmental and historical change.
Dr. Nancy Langston speaks about the current conflict in Oregon’s Malheur National Wildlife Refuge and about hopeful collaborations for conservation.
Dr. Robin W. Kimmerer speaks about indigenous knowledges, traditional science, and the stories and words that connect us to our nonhuman homes.
CHE’s upcoming symposium asks: how useful is it to talk about the “environment”? Is there a better word or framework? Dr. Kate Brown gives us her answer as she shares her research on atomic cities.
Advocates of small government have a long and uncharted history within US environmentalism, argues Brian Drake in an interview about his recent book.
World-renowned herpetologist and naturalist Harry Greene discusses humanity’s “deep history” with snakes, empathy and embodiment in animal research, Pleistocene rewilding, natural history in education, and more.