In Praise of Weeds: Sympoiesis at St. James’s Piccadilly
“Aftermath: Weeds and Wilding” is a collaborative eco-religious project seeking seeds of resilience and regeneration in the midst of disaster.
“Aftermath: Weeds and Wilding” is a collaborative eco-religious project seeking seeds of resilience and regeneration in the midst of disaster.
British Arctic explorers lacked local knowledge of the environments through which they passed and sometimes consulted Inuit shamans, whose geographical knowledge was known to be extensive. One expedition to seek the Northwest Passage exemplifies how they supplemented their deficit with indigenous environmental knowledge.
This article examines transformations in the meaning and value of Voacanga africana.
This article presents examples of ancient conceptions of rivers as more-than-human agents and their struggle with humans.
This article proposes a new definition of baroque to better understand the global dimensions of the representation of nature by the Qing dynasty.
Indigenous groups in Nayarit, Mexico, reaffirmed their sacred environmental sites through social movement.
An account of the 1795 mass drowning on Lough Derg in Ireland’s County Donegal.
This article situates contemporary debates over kangaroo-population management within Australia’s violent history of settler-colonial occupation and attendant environmental transformations.
These Boy Scout images, particularly focused on the 1919–1925 era, demonstrate that human labor and history permeated popular American nature ideology and hiking practices at that time.
This essay proposes that Olaudah Equiano’s account of a 1773 Arctic voyage doubles as a critique of exploration and exploitation.