Climate Communication in Education Beyond Academia | Ghosh in Munich
Reflections on Amitav Ghosh’s Gun Island by Sabina Magagnoli.
Reflections on Amitav Ghosh’s Gun Island by Sabina Magagnoli.
Isaac Yuen’s “Tales from Coral Country” is an inventive, Calvino-esque meditation on coral formations and the potentially lethal dangers they face. It is one of the two honorable mentions in the fiction category of the RCC environmental writing competition “Tell the Untold!”
Abi Andrews’ “JUDAS DONKEY” is a memorable animal-centered story set in outback Australia, consistently atmospheric and chillingly portrayed. It is one of the two honorable mentions in the fiction category of the RCC environmental writing competition “Tell the Untold!”
Reflections on Amitav Ghosh’s Gun Island by Markus Vogt.
The Age of the Anthropoiescene is a time of sympoietic tanglings with the human and more-than-human ghosts of deep time.
A woman returns to her ancestral home, where mangroves speak memory, loss, and land history long buried.
Tathagat Bhatia’s “A Few Hazy Anthropocenes” is a skilfully controlled reflection on haze as both a form of air pollution and a metaphor for the uncertainty of our times. It was one of the two honorable mentions in the nonfiction category of the RCC environmental writing competition “Tell the Untold!”
Reflections on Amitav Ghosh’s Gun Island by Julia Ludewig.
Reflections on Amitav Ghosh’s Gun Island by Nakul Heroor.
Sonji Shah’s “The Story of Geology” is a clever take on the “lithic imaginary” in Bjornerud, Jemisin, and Macfarlane, showing how underground worlds can excite new thoughts on what it means to belong to the earth. It was one of the two honorable mentions in the reflective essay category of the RCC environmental writing competition “Tell the Untold!”