This article is part of a symposium issue entitled Cultural Environmentalism @ 10, occuring on the tenth anniversary of Prof. Boyle\u27s book, Shamans, Software, and Spleens. In this article Prof. Boyle offers his thoughts on the failings, limitations, occasional promise, and possible future of the ideas discussed in the symposium including both the work on cultural environmentalism and the surrounding ideas on authorship, the rhetoric of economic analysis, the structure of intellectual property scholarship, and the jurisprudence of the public domain
This symposium is about the idea of free market environmentalism in general and the book Free Mark...
As I mull the current issue – a wonderful collection of open submissions and a terrific supplement o...
This thesis is the result of my passion for Beat literature and ecological ethics. The 1950s and the...
This article is part of a symposium issue entitled Cultural Environmentalism @ 10, occuring on the ...
Van Houweling explores both the benefits and failings of conservation easements on land on the one h...
The environmental crisis is not only the fault of failed engineering, bad science, ecological misund...
Reading through the articles in this Symposium is like walking deep into a dense forest. The experie...
The second enclosure movement critique is familiar theoretical territory for scholars concerned with...
This article focuses on greening cultural policy within a sustainable development context. We examin...
My dissertation identifies and compares the literary techniques that form narratives of environmenta...
In 1962, Rachel Carson named the natural environment. Scientists were beginning to understand the co...
I start this paper with a question that is also a provocation: how sustainable is a cultural studies...
The growing amount of anthologies, monographs, and textbooks shows that environmental aesthetics is ...
Over the last twenty years there has been a remarkable theoretical flourishing in the field of envir...
Although the Anthropocene and climate change are widely known as scientific issues, they are also si...
This symposium is about the idea of free market environmentalism in general and the book Free Mark...
As I mull the current issue – a wonderful collection of open submissions and a terrific supplement o...
This thesis is the result of my passion for Beat literature and ecological ethics. The 1950s and the...
This article is part of a symposium issue entitled Cultural Environmentalism @ 10, occuring on the ...
Van Houweling explores both the benefits and failings of conservation easements on land on the one h...
The environmental crisis is not only the fault of failed engineering, bad science, ecological misund...
Reading through the articles in this Symposium is like walking deep into a dense forest. The experie...
The second enclosure movement critique is familiar theoretical territory for scholars concerned with...
This article focuses on greening cultural policy within a sustainable development context. We examin...
My dissertation identifies and compares the literary techniques that form narratives of environmenta...
In 1962, Rachel Carson named the natural environment. Scientists were beginning to understand the co...
I start this paper with a question that is also a provocation: how sustainable is a cultural studies...
The growing amount of anthologies, monographs, and textbooks shows that environmental aesthetics is ...
Over the last twenty years there has been a remarkable theoretical flourishing in the field of envir...
Although the Anthropocene and climate change are widely known as scientific issues, they are also si...
This symposium is about the idea of free market environmentalism in general and the book Free Mark...
As I mull the current issue – a wonderful collection of open submissions and a terrific supplement o...
This thesis is the result of my passion for Beat literature and ecological ethics. The 1950s and the...