“Mediating Climate, Mediating Scale”
This article examines how a scalar divide has been negotiated visually, focusing in particular on Ed Hawkins’ 2016 viral climate spiral.
This article examines how a scalar divide has been negotiated visually, focusing in particular on Ed Hawkins’ 2016 viral climate spiral.
This essay examines how the fossil fuel energy regimes that support contemporary academic norms in turn shape and constrain knowledge production.
This article sheds light on the diversity of meanings and connotations that tend to be lost or hidden in translations between different conceptualizations of nature in East and South-East Asia.
Lunchtime Colloquium at the Rachel Carson Center with Ron Doel.
Full text of the book Fire and Snow: Climate Fiction from the Inklings to Game of Thrones.
In his article Robert Kirkman recommends that environmental philosophers consider the possibility of a Darwinian humanism, through which moral agents are understood as both free and causally intertwined with the natural world.
This article argues for the term “uncanny water” as a conceptual tool for reading contemporary oceanic fictions.
Lunchtime Colloquium at the Rachel Carson Center with Péter Makai.
This profile features the preface and afterword from Environment, Power, and Justice: Southern African Histories.
Lunchtime Colloquium at the Rachel Carson Center with Miles Powell.