Philippe-Sirice Bridel, the Natural Landscape, and the Swiss National Sentiment
Philippe-Sirice Bridel’s youthful diary synthesizes the political and aesthetic issues related to nature, showing the environmental sensibility of the time.
Philippe-Sirice Bridel’s youthful diary synthesizes the political and aesthetic issues related to nature, showing the environmental sensibility of the time.
This article presents examples of ancient conceptions of rivers as more-than-human agents and their struggle with humans.
What happens when we look at Walden Woods of 1845 through a multispecies lens?
An early Australian conservationist offers a window onto the ways in which nature was once valued.
In Tanzania and Mauritius, physical disasters are filtered through cultural lenses, including sightings of cryptids: serpents and a werewolf.
How we project our own fantasies onto animals in Chernobyl depends on if they are what animals we have in mind.
The settler occupation of Central Brazil is the focus of nineteenth-century landscape art.
The article explores the circulation of environmental ignorance on Drimys winteri in European written sources in 1578–1776.
An enduring legacy of the antinuclear movement is its construction of a narrative connecting human survival to nature’s beneficence.