The Enemy is Nature: Military Machines and Technological Bricolage in Britain’s “Great Agricultural Experiment”
Cobbled-together machines are turned loose on nature in a desperate bid to coax peanuts from the soils of Tanganyika Territory.
Cobbled-together machines are turned loose on nature in a desperate bid to coax peanuts from the soils of Tanganyika Territory.
In Tanzania, those who consider rats technology envision nature as being transformed through social practices that rework environmental histories.
Wilko Graf von Hardenberg on digital humanities. This is an entry in the KTH EHL VideoDictionary.
As virgin forests become carbon sinks and biodiversity hotspots, their coproduced history is consigned to oblivion.
In this episode from the New Books Network podcast, Allision Cobb is interviewed on her book, Plastic: An Autobiography.
Inspired by Francis Bacon’s ant, spider, and bee as models of collecting, processing, and transforming knowledge, Kimberly Coulter, Wilko Graf von Hardenberg, and Finn Arne Jørgensen founded the blog Ant Spider Bee to reflect on ways technology was transforming the epistemologies, methods, and dissemination of environmental humanities research. A kind of time capsule with essays and embedded media by thirty authors, this e-book presents snapshots of transformations in knowledge practices during a period of rapid change.
Blood in the Mobile is the story about how our phones are connected to illegal mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
On the exploitation of flatfish stocks in the Baltic Sea as a classic example of the “tragedy of the commons.”
This article examines the environmental implications of Dutch nineteenth-century attempts to establish a telegraph connection across the Sunda Strait.
Using the case study of the Bhopal gas disaster, S. Ravi Rajan articulates a framework of questions for the next generation of research and advocacy.