The Emergence of the Hero-Hunter in the Greek Anthropocene
On masculinity, hunting, and the evolving Hero-Hunter concept in the 1960s Greek Anthropocene.
On masculinity, hunting, and the evolving Hero-Hunter concept in the 1960s Greek Anthropocene.
Wendy Mulford’s poetry reflects on drainage, environmental loss, and social reproduction in the fens, reframing environmental history through a Marxist-feminist lens.
An exploration of Colm Tóibín’s literary responses to the coastal erosion of Ireland’s County Wexford.
This article follows “the Danish Society for a Living Sea” and their engagement with ghost nets and “local haunting dynamics.”
How birds and poetry reacquaint us with an awareness of history and feelings of loss in Anthropocene nature reserves.
What role does Vernadsky’s concept of the noosphere plays in contemporary Russian environmental legislation and green economy discourses?
The sea gives and the sea takes away. The story of the submerged forest at Redcar, England.
Ecoanxiety in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein signals our ability to create art in reaction to environmental disaster in increasingly unstable planetary futures.
To live among the stars always meant solving the down-to-earth problem of sustainable waste management.
Humans have a long history of meddling in the oil palm’s sex life.