"Natural Resources, Gadgets and Artificial Life"
Steven Luper discusses natural resources, gadgets, and artificial life.
Steven Luper discusses natural resources, gadgets, and artificial life.
As agents of knowledge and appropriators of technology, exhibitions (and most notably museum exhibitions) have played an important role in the early twentieth century, when gas and electricity, the quintessential modern energy sources, aimed to oust wood, coal, and peat while simultaneously competing intensely with each other.
This essay contests the traditional narrative of the gas revolution in the Netherlands. To illustrate the domestic roots of revolutionary change, the essay focuses on gas use in households.
This film follows a Christian community and its leader as they resist the oil and gas industry and its plans for expansion into their land.
This essay discusses methodological difficulties of the established concept of social memory for the analysis of energo-political discourse. It examines the case study of the German-Russian energy cooperation on the natural gas market which began with the discovery of the Urengoi gas field in 1966.
The fifth episode of the Crosscurrents podcast series, John Sandlos interviews Ashlee Cunsolo on the concept of ecological grief among indigenous communities in Labrador, Canada; Sean Kheraj speaks about the history of the Trans Mountain Pipeline Project.
In this episode from the New Books Network podcast, Bret Gustafson is interviewed on his book, Bolivia in the Age of Gas.