EcoCast: “On the Shoulders of Giants: Important Voices of Environmental Humanities—Joni Adamson”
In this episode of ASLE’s official podcast, Jemma Deer and Brandon Galm interviews Joni Adamson, director of the Environmental Humanities Initiative.
In this episode of ASLE’s official podcast, Jemma Deer and Brandon Galm interviews Joni Adamson, director of the Environmental Humanities Initiative.
Anglo-Saxon Literary Landscapes by Heide Estes is a part of the series “Environmental Humanities in Pre-Modern Cultures,” published by Amsterdam University Press.
Encountering Water in Early Modern Europe and Beyond by Lindsay Starkey is a part of the series “Environmental Humanities in Pre-Modern Cultures,” published by Amsterdam University Press.
Old English Ecotheology by Courtney Barajas is a part of the series “Environmental Humanities in Pre-Modern Cultures,” published by Amsterdam University Press.
“Why have millions of readers and viewers become magnetized by the hitherto arcane field of plant communication? The article argues that the contemporary appeal of plant communication is rooted in a quest for alternative modes of being to neoliberalism, modes more accommodating of the coexistence of cooperation and competition in human and more-than-human communities.”
ClimateCultures was launched in 2017 and is a growing network for creative responses to the Anthropocene.
What connects the sci-fi book Dune with coastal dunes and geoengineering?
In this episode from the New Books Network podcast, Kate Rigby is interviewed on her book, Reclaiming Romanticism: Towards an Ecopoetics of Decolonisation.
In this episode of ASLE’s official podcast, Jemma Deer and Brandon Galm interviews Marc Dipaolo, author of Fire and Ice: Climate Fiction from the Inklings to Game of Thrones.
In this episode of ASLE’s official podcast, Jemma Deer and Brandon Galm presents 25 environmentally-themed “Quick Fictions.”