Axes on the Ground: Wolves and Women on the North American Frontier
How did gendered evolutions of European lupine folklore impact settler conceptions of boundaries between the human and nonhuman?
How did gendered evolutions of European lupine folklore impact settler conceptions of boundaries between the human and nonhuman?
In this article, former Carson Landhaus Fellow Subarna De contextualises the ecological and cultural practices of the Kodagu coffee plantations of Southern India within the post-/decolonial framework of bioregional reinhabitation.
In this video, Reinaldo Funes Monzote (Hamburg Institute for Advanced Studies) presents his project “From Slavery Plantations to Mass Tourism: A Project for a Synthesis of the Environmental History of the Greater Caribbean.”
A reflection on the use of images in environmental history.
Full text of the first volume of The Anthropocene as Multiple Crisis: Perspectives from Latin America.
Full text of Tamar Novick’s Milk and Honey, a environmental history of the state that centers on the intersection of technology and religion in modern Palestine/Israel.
A monograph on desert dystopias and the environmental origins of apartheid.
Explore the Moon, the world, and the self in a lyrical essay with author Christopher Cokinos.
Emerging from an Indigenous Nishnaabeg ontology, “survivance” calls for an understanding of other-than-human persons as agentially surviving and resisting colonial violence.
This article situates contemporary debates over kangaroo-population management within Australia’s violent history of settler-colonial occupation and attendant environmental transformations.