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Articles 31 - 43 of 43
Full-Text Articles in Communication
Editor's Note, Peter Schulman, Josh A. Weinstein
Editor's Note, Peter Schulman, Josh A. Weinstein
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
Editors' note to volume 2 of Green Humanities (2017).
Cover: Green Humanities, Vol. 2, 2017
Cover: Green Humanities, Vol. 2, 2017
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
Cover image, including masthead and editorial board, for volume 2 of Green Humanities (2017).
Call For Papers, Peter Schulman, Josh A. Weinstein
Call For Papers, Peter Schulman, Josh A. Weinstein
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
Call for Papers for the inaugural issue, volume 1 of Green Humanities (2015).
The Creative Arts, Environmental Crises & Well-Being In Globalized Place: Methodological Considerations For An Ecocritical Mode Of Practice-Based Research, Brad Warren, Patrick West
The Creative Arts, Environmental Crises & Well-Being In Globalized Place: Methodological Considerations For An Ecocritical Mode Of Practice-Based Research, Brad Warren, Patrick West
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
[From Introduction] Problems pertaining to environmental and ecological well-being are increasingly having effects on a global scale; climate change is the most obvious example of this, but not the only one (the pollution of the oceans and transnational light pollution are others). Our paper argues that individual and community well-being in general, which is always directly or indirectly related to specifically environmental or ecological well-being at the global scale, can be augmented through the introduction of Creative Arts activities and products into local communities.
Eco-Digital Pedagogies: Why And How Teaching The Green Humanities Can Shape Change, Laura Barbasrhoden
Eco-Digital Pedagogies: Why And How Teaching The Green Humanities Can Shape Change, Laura Barbasrhoden
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
[First paragraph] In Now You See It, interdisciplinary scholar and education leader Cathy Davidson points out a stunningly obvious truth about human perception: “Whatever you see means there is something you do not see” (290). Practitioners of the environmental humanities have long taken on tasks of seeing and saying what is not seen, what is not heard, from the vantage point of dominant ideologies, from consumerist economic models to the instrumentalist, anthropocentric rationalities that undergird them. Meantime, over the last few decades, we green humanities scholars have broadened our range of vision: studied more diverse texts, deepened analyses, and …
Recognizing The Dualism To Overcome It: The Hybridization Of Reality, Fabio Valenti Possamai
Recognizing The Dualism To Overcome It: The Hybridization Of Reality, Fabio Valenti Possamai
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
[First paragraph] Bruno Latour’s project attempts to overcome the dualism between nature and culture that still persists in our world. My focus will reside on three of Latour’s books, namely, We Have Never Been Modern, Reassembling the Social, and An Inquiry into Modes of Existence. Since the way we live our lives greatly influences the way we think and, consequently, our philosophical positions, it is important to say something about Bruno Latour’s biography. His life was extremely inter and transdisciplinary, a strong reason for his work to be so non-orthodox (Blok and Jensen 8).
Is Trash Hybrid?, Todd Levasseur
Is Trash Hybrid?, Todd Levasseur
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
[From first paragraph] The scholarship focusing on globalization over the last thirty years has achieved impressive gains in nuance and understanding. Some of the more prominent approaches to study globalization that have developed in this period include network, feminist, gender, economic, political, media, religious, diaspora, and migratory lenses. All of these lenses are adroitly utilized by scholars to help us better understand globalization and their use helps to shape the field of global studies. This article argues that environmental humanities scholars must build upon insights from these disciplines, while bringing scholarly tools from the environmental sciences into their research projects, …
Of Portages And Pedagogy, Glenn Freeman
Of Portages And Pedagogy, Glenn Freeman
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
Under title: In Memory of Bob Black.
The Process Of Disaster: Environmental Justice Discourse And Spike Lee’S When The Levees Broke, Ali Brox
The Process Of Disaster: Environmental Justice Discourse And Spike Lee’S When The Levees Broke, Ali Brox
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
[First Paragraph] One of the first images viewers see in Spike Lee’s When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts (2006) is high water lapping near the top of a street sign. The street name is Humanity, and flood waters dangerously threaten to overtake the green rectangular sign. Lee’s image succinctly portrays the theme for the next four hours of the documentary: the threat of losing a sense of humanity as a result of Hurricane Katrina and the flooding of New Orleans. The Humanity Street sign becomes more nuanced when considered from an environmental justice perspective: the rising waters …
Notes On Contributors, Peter Schulman, Josh A. Weinstein
Notes On Contributors, Peter Schulman, Josh A. Weinstein
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
Notes on Contributors to volume 3, Green Humanities (2021).
A “Kind Of Impiety”: Deforestation, Sustainability, And Self In The Works Of Samuel Richardson And Yuan Mei, Samara Cahill
A “Kind Of Impiety”: Deforestation, Sustainability, And Self In The Works Of Samuel Richardson And Yuan Mei, Samara Cahill
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
[From first paragraph] In line with scholarship by Timothy Clark, Erin Drew and John Sitter, David Fairer, and Tom Keymer, I argue that it is a distortion of eighteenth-century literature to identify the Romantic period as the origin of modern ecological consciousness. Indeed, according to Drew and Sitter, the dismissive characterization of the eighteenth century in current ecocritical scholarship is “puzzling” because much of the literature of that period “not only deals with the natural world but does so in ways arguably more ecocentric and less egocentric in orientation than much Romantic writing” (227).
Editors' Note, Peter Schulman, Josh Weinstein
Editors' Note, Peter Schulman, Josh Weinstein
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
Editors' note to the inaugural issue, volume 1 of Green Humanities (2015).
Cover: Green Humanities, Vol. 1, 2015
Cover: Green Humanities, Vol. 1, 2015
Green Humanities: A Journal of Ecological Thought in Literature, Philosophy & the Arts
Cover image for inaugural issue, volume 1 of Green Humanities (2015).