As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans and about humans. The latter implication draws on pervasive cultural ideas about nature which underlie the Anthropocene and its climatic impacts, namely nature as an extractable, endlessly-renewable resource. While scholars in the environmental humanities, animal studies, and critical plant studies have been quick to both diagnose and propose new directions for our engagements with the material universe, scholarship on archival materiality has continued to focus on the archives as an institution for and about human intellectual endeavors. In other words, the archives continues to be an extractable resource. Within the archives animal, plant, an...
The dawning realization that the planet may have entered a new geological epoch called the Anthropoc...
In such a historical dramatic period for the future of our planet and their inhabitants, the role of...
Here we stand, each one of us one primate among billions in a species that has overrun and ruined it...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...
In this editors' note, guest editors Eira Tansey and Robert Montoya introduce the special issue for ...
This paper presents the concept of the living archive as a system which reflects how social behavior...
Humanities scholars argue that the Anthropocene forces humanity to confront its death as a species. ...
My current body of work captures and displays a humanity manipulated geological history. I use and r...
The Anthropocene has rendered the familiar strange and the strange familiar. As David Farrier sugges...
Our current geological epoch, provisionally called the Anthropocene, has come into being with the in...
At the 2015 UN Conference on Climate Change in Paris France, 195 nations reached a decision to commi...
This practice-based research project argues that the landscape is operating as an archive in the Ant...
Seedbanks, or so-called archival arks of the apocalypse, are addressing accelerating anthropocentric...
This thesis is a response to an emergent discourse on the relationship between the visual arts and t...
This article was originally published in ARCHIVARIA, The Journal of the Association of Canadian Arch...
The dawning realization that the planet may have entered a new geological epoch called the Anthropoc...
In such a historical dramatic period for the future of our planet and their inhabitants, the role of...
Here we stand, each one of us one primate among billions in a species that has overrun and ruined it...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...
In this editors' note, guest editors Eira Tansey and Robert Montoya introduce the special issue for ...
This paper presents the concept of the living archive as a system which reflects how social behavior...
Humanities scholars argue that the Anthropocene forces humanity to confront its death as a species. ...
My current body of work captures and displays a humanity manipulated geological history. I use and r...
The Anthropocene has rendered the familiar strange and the strange familiar. As David Farrier sugges...
Our current geological epoch, provisionally called the Anthropocene, has come into being with the in...
At the 2015 UN Conference on Climate Change in Paris France, 195 nations reached a decision to commi...
This practice-based research project argues that the landscape is operating as an archive in the Ant...
Seedbanks, or so-called archival arks of the apocalypse, are addressing accelerating anthropocentric...
This thesis is a response to an emergent discourse on the relationship between the visual arts and t...
This article was originally published in ARCHIVARIA, The Journal of the Association of Canadian Arch...
The dawning realization that the planet may have entered a new geological epoch called the Anthropoc...
In such a historical dramatic period for the future of our planet and their inhabitants, the role of...
Here we stand, each one of us one primate among billions in a species that has overrun and ruined it...