Responding to the Anthropocene: Perspectives from Twelve Academic Disciplines
In this book, scholars and scientists from twelve disciplines write about the Anthropocene.
In this book, scholars and scientists from twelve disciplines write about the Anthropocene.
A book on the history of repeat photography of glaciers.
A reflection on the Sustainabile Development Goals (SDGs) in environmental history.
Read the introduction to The Routledge Handbook of Environmental History.
Frank Zelko dives into the history of teeth and shows that today’s teeth are the product of centuries of biocultural evolution.
One of our editors, Brady Fauth, sits down with anthropologist Francesca Mezzenzana to discuss her developing research into children’s human–nonhuman relationships across cultures.
This essay brings previously underexplored paths of political ecology, environmental history, and even biosemiotics and plant neurophysiology in Italo Calvino’s The Baron in the Trees (1957) to light.
Joseph Adeniran Adedeji shows how the cultural meaning of Yoruba heritage sites signify hope for a harmonious coexistence between society and the nonhuman world.
The surprising career of the advertising slogan “everybody talks about the weather” is a story about political transformation.