Skip to content

Environmental History Now.

A Platform on Representation, Engagement, and Community
  • About
    • The Team
    • Contributors
    • Series
  • News
  • Series
  • Podcast
  • Submit
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • Instagram
  • Mastodon
  • LinkedIn
  • Search
Politics of Nature by S. Marek MullerApr 25, 20246:00 pmApril 25, 2024
Read More
A close up photo of the display of an elephant (Loxodonta africana) from Congo at the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Belgium. The display shows two ivory horns, a long trunk, four legs, and the entire body of the elephant at an angle on a black pedestal.

More-than-Human Remains: Reckoning with Ivory in (Post)Colonial Museums

Museums developed and funded by European colonization often grapple with the morally blurry lines between public education and neocolonial exploitation. Elephant tusk — otherwise known as ivory — is embedded in these politics of historical display.

EHN Blog by Esther van t VeenApr 17, 20246:00 pmApril 17, 2024
Read More

Fearing the Subject of Study: The Climate Crisis and the Environmental Historian

The world we have constructed appears to be hurtling towards disaster, if not outright oblivion.

Tools for Change by Valeria Zambianchi and Kato Van SpeybroeckMar 28, 20245:00 pmMarch 27, 2024
White statue busts in front of black bookshelves with old books.

Seemingly objective? The colonial power of university rankings

EHN Blog by Duygu YıldırımMar 12, 20245:00 pmMarch 14, 2024
Read More
Two open folios of botanical illustration, plants colored green with surrounder borders, in a Turkish manuscript from the early modern period.

Orhan Pamuk, Me, and Two Men From the Seventeenth Century

Bologna, 2018. The odor of seriousness hung heavy in the reading room of the archives.

Tools for Change by Isobel AkermanFeb 27, 20246:00 amMarch 14, 2024
Photo series showing vegetation

How to wild an environmental historian

EHN Blog by Carolina GranadoFeb 22, 20246:00 amFebruary 21, 2024
Read More

Remaining emotionless in the face of catastrophe: a gender perspective of climate change communication

In the film Don’t Look Up, a particularly memorable scene features scientist Dr. Kate Dibiasky, portrayed by Jennifer Lawrence, tearfully proclaiming on national television, “We are all 100% for sure gonna f***ing die”.

EHN Blog by EHN TeamJan 22, 20247:08 pmFebruary 19, 2024
An icon for call for pitches

Call for pitches!

Ecotones Now by EHN TeamJan 11, 20244:00 pmJanuary 11, 2024

Ecotones Now: Episode 2.6 ft. Esme Garlake

News by EHN TeamJan 10, 20243:00 pmJanuary 10, 2024

Tidings for the New Year

News by EHN TeamJan 2, 20249:00 amJanuary 2, 2024

EHN Top Posts of 2023

Posts navigation

Previous 1 2 3 4 5 … 33 Next
© 2025 Environmental History Now..

Begin typing your search above and press return to search. Press Esc to cancel.