Detroit Wild City
The film depicts the rise, fall, and rebirth of the postindustrial city Detroit.
The film depicts the rise, fall, and rebirth of the postindustrial city Detroit.
This film is a photographic journey showing the effects of human activity on a variety of landscapes.
This film examines life in the Chittagong ship demolition yard, where workers risk their lives for two dollars a day to provide for their families.
This film follows the responses of Detroit residents to the city’s industrial decline.
This film follows a seventeen-year-old Chinese girl who leaves home in order to work in a Chinese jeans factory.
This award-winning film examines the experience of ordinary workers as it tracks a canned food product on its journey across the world.
In Trash Dance, choreographer Allison Orr tries to persuade employees of the Austin Department of Solid Waste to participate in a public dance performance.
Jennifer Hamilton’s article for the “Living Lexicon for the Environmental Humanities” section rethinks “labor” as a useful concept for the Environmental Humanities, by troubling the spectacle of the skyline of Sydney’s Central Business District: a sublime image of late Capitalist growth.
Making the Palace Machine Work: Mobilizing People, Objects, and Nature in the Qing Empire, edited by Martina Martina, Kai Jun Chen, and Dorothy Ko, is available to download in its entirety.