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Jonathan L. Clark deposited Ecological Biopower, Environmental Violence Against Animals, and the “Greening” of the Factory Farm in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoThe promulgation of pollution control regulations governing factory farms has led to a striking new way of representing and intervening in the bodies of farmed animals: the body is being represented as a source of pollution, and various technological interventions, from genetic engineering to dietary changes, are being deployed to reduce pollution…[Read more]
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Jonathan L. Clark deposited Living with Transgenic Animals in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoThis article examines Farm Sanctuary’s failed effort to save the Enviropigs. In the Spring of 2012, after losing the main source of funding for its Enviropig project, the University of Guelph, in Ontario, Canada, killed the last sixteen members of this line of transgenic pigs, despite Farm Sanctuary’s offer to place them in permanent homes. The…[Read more]
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Jonathan L. Clark deposited Which Animals Do We Study? in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoAn examination of taxonomic bias in the field of animal studies.
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Jonathan L. Clark deposited Consider the Vulture: An Ethical Approach to Roadkill in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoRoadkill is disgusting. Many people just want it removed from the roads as quickly as possible, and they don’t care where it goes. In Pennsylvania, most of the deer carcasses that are collected from the roads end up in landfills. But is this a respectful way to treat the dead? And what about the vultures and other scavengers who would otherwise e…[Read more]
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Francesco Luzzini deposited The Vesuvian Eruption of 1631: an Early Modern History (Review) in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoReview of the book “The Vesuvian Eruption of 1631: an Early Modern History” (by Alfonso Tortora)
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Francesco Luzzini deposited Description, analogy, symbolism, faith. Jesuit science and iconography in the early modern debate on the origin of springs in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoBy the end of the sixteenth century, many Jesuit colleges had become centers of excellence all over Europe for such disciplines as mathematics, astronomy, hydraulics, and mechanics. Not a few members of the order provided influential contributions to science: in the case of the study of waters, the inquisitive eye of Jesuits took part in the l…[Read more]
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Francesco Luzzini deposited Through dark and mysterious paths. Early modern science and the search for the origin of springs from the 16thto the 18thcenturies in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoSince its first attempts to understand natural phenomena, early modern science devoted great attention to the problematic issue of the origin of springs. This essay examines the lively debate that emerged from the studies on fresh water during the years spanning from the mid-sixteenth century to the early eighteenth. By focusing on the…[Read more]
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Francesco Luzzini deposited Multa curiosa. Vallisneri’s Early Studies on Earth Sciences in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoIn 1687, after he graduated in Medicine, young Antonio Vallisneri (1661-1730) returned in the Duchy of Modena and Reggio. In those years he mainly served as general practitioner; nevertheless, he also devoted many studies to various aspects of the natural sciences. He performed many observations, accurately reporting them in seven “Quaderni”…[Read more]
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Jason W. Moore deposited Cheap Food and Bad Climate: From Surplus Value to Negative-Value in the Capitalist World-Ecology in the group
World-Ecology Research Network on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoCapitalism, understood as a world-ecology that joins accumulation, power, and nature in dialectical unity, has been adept at evading so-called Malthusian dynamics through an astonishing historical capacity to produce, locate, and occupy cheap natures external to the system. In recent decades, the last frontiers have closed, and this astonishing…[Read more]
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Jason W. Moore deposited Metabolic Rift or Metabolic Shift? Dialectics, Nature, and the World-Historical Method in the group
World-Ecology Research Network on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoAbstract In the flowering of Red-Green Thought over the past two decades, metabolic rift thinking is surely one of its most colorful varieties. The metabolic rift has captured the imagination of critical environmental scholars, becoming a shorthand for capitalism’s troubled relations in the web of life. This article pursues an entwined critique a…[Read more]
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Jason W. Moore created the group
World-Ecology Research Network on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month ago -
Victoria Addis deposited The Greening of Postmodern Discourse in Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake and Graham Swift’s Waterland in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoIn this article, I argue that the groundlessness associated with postmodernism is not as entrenched within its discourse as it may appear. Graham Swift’s Waterland (1992) and Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake (2003), while conforming to many of the aesthetic values of postmodernism, share an ecopostmodernist platform that raises questions and con…[Read more]
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Caren Irr deposited Climate Fiction in English in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoAn introductory survey of climate fiction (a.k.a. “cli-fi”) in English. Written with an international readership in mind.
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Sian Sullivan deposited Making nature investable: from legibility to leverageability in fabricating ‘nature’ as ‘natural capital’ in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoIn response to perceived valuation problems giving rise to global environmental crisis, ‘nature’ is being qualified, quantified and materialised as the new external(ised) ‘Nature-whole’ of ‘natural capital’. This paper problematises the increasing legibility, through numbering and (ac)counting practices, of natural capital as an apparently…[Read more]
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Sian Sullivan deposited The disvalues of alienated capitalist natures in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoThis engagement highlights the antagonism between wealth and the commodity value form posed at the heart of Marx’s work. In doing so, it considers methodological possibilities for both understanding and intervening in the fabricating of new alienated capitalist values from beyond-human natures.
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James Smith deposited Rethinking Clean: Historicising religion, science and the purity of water in the twenty-first century in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe historical narrative of water purity tends to chart a process of secularisation with an
increasing importance on cleanliness. We suggest otherwise – that rhetorically at least, water
has never been secularised. Moral impurity and water contamination have a long and
interrelated history. Even before the connection had been made between c…[Read more] -
James Smith deposited Rethinking Clean: Historicising religion, science and the purity of water in the twenty-first century in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe historical narrative of water purity tends to chart a process of secularisation with an
increasing importance on cleanliness. We suggest otherwise – that rhetorically at least, water
has never been secularised. Moral impurity and water contamination have a long and
interrelated history. Even before the connection had been made between c…[Read more] -
Eric Meyer deposited Beyond Ecological Democracy: Black Feminist Thought and the End of Man in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoAppeals to a cosmic ecological democracy are common in environmentally engaged scholarship, and especially in ecological theology. This essay takes up the thought of Sylvia Wynter, Delores Williams, and Saidiya Hartman to argue for a different horizon for ecological politics.
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Richard Nisa deposited Environmental Geography in the group
Environmental Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoIn this class, students will engage in a critical examination of environmental transformations that arise from the complex interactions between natural systems and human activities. The pursuit of knowledge about natural resources and ecological systems is a scientific enterprise, yet addressing questions about the production, consumption,…[Read more]
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