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Uncategorized by Jessica S. SamuelApr 16, 20205:00 pmJune 8, 2020
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Human Fragility: The Condition We Fight To Escape

Environmental crises, as a specific brand of crises, have a peculiar knack for not only exposing the nonsensical nature of many of our institutions and hierarchies by rendering them impotent but for also making plain human fragility.

Field Notes by Roberta BiasilloApr 9, 20208:26 pmApril 10, 2020

How to Accomplish a Failure: The Academic Toolkit

Uncategorized by Saskia BrillMar 31, 202010:04 pmSeptember 11, 2022
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Encountering Clams: An Experience of Ancient Knowledge and Present Subsistance

Clam digging is wholly dependent on the rhythms of the shore. Beds are exposed when the tide is low, which is itself related to the patterns of the moon. Lowest tides often happen to be in the middle of the night, especially during a full moon.

Problems of Place by Carrie AlexanderMar 24, 20208:00 pmMarch 24, 2020

Problems of Place: Being Human in a Pandemic

EHN Blog by Tamara FernandoMar 9, 202012:00 pmMarch 9, 2020
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“Secret Histories” of the Sea

On an expedition to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) in 1906, the colonial official James Hornell was given a tour of Pukkulam in the Mannar district, on the northwest coast of the island.

Uncategorized by Juliet Larkin-GilmoreMar 6, 20208:20 amMarch 4, 2020
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Cows on the Colorado: The History of Dairy Colonialism and Mohave Health

Indian Affairs officials from Washington D.C. to the Lower Colorado River believed that milk, dairy, and beef (in other words, cows) would save the Indians in more than one way.

Field Notes by Taylor DysartFeb 28, 202012:16 amFebruary 28, 2020
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(Re)Visiting the (Mental) Spaces of Our Research

 “I have a bit of a provocative question for Taylor.” 

Oh no. Here it comes.

“Have you ever done ayahuasca?” 

Problems of Place by Ligia ArguilezFeb 12, 20208:29 pmJanuary 29, 2020

Problems of Place: How My Nana Taught Me to Listen to Plants

Uncategorized by Ruby Turok-SquireFeb 4, 202010:30 amFebruary 4, 2020
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The Forest that Grows Itself, The Poem that Writes Itself

How do you make a palm tree grow on the page? How do you capture the feeling of April? These are the kinds of questions that William Stanley Merwin’s poetry may be able to answer.

Uncategorized by Anna TownhillJan 30, 20208:20 am
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Rewilding Heritage: A Personal Response

Feral. The viscerality of this single word was enough to capture my attention. I had no idea that this book would introduce me to something so frighteningly obvious that I was almost angry that this concept was so new to me.

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