Are there better ethics than hope? Two scholars with new books about the author of Walden reflect on Henry David Thoreau's environmental ethic, flirtations with despair, and anarchist politics. The post Thoreau, Now More than Ever: A Conversation with Laura Dassow Walls and Daegan Miller appeared first on Edge Effects .
Feb 20, 2018•54 min
One historian exposes shadowy corners of cannabis's history and offers prescriptions for achieving a bright, sustainable future for the world's widest-ranging crop. The post A Century of Cannabis: A Conversation with Nick Johnson appeared first on Edge Effects .
Feb 06, 2018•52 min
The decline of honeybees is cause for alarm and a symptom of global biodiversity loss. Beekeepers, however, find creative ways to build relationships with honeybees and steward their hives. The post Finding Hope and Community with Honeybees: A Conversation with Heather Swan appeared first on Edge Effects .
Jan 23, 2018•43 min
What does the scientific study of biological diversity have to do with the history of U.S. imperialism in the Caribbean? Just about everything, says the author of a new book on American field stations in the tropics. The post The Tangled Roots of U.S. Imperialism and Biodiversity Science: A Conversation with Megan Raby appeared first on Edge Effects .
Jan 09, 2018•28 min
The fight against African American land loss isn't just about economic justice. It's about environmental sustainability. The post Food Justice Requires Land Justice: A Conversation with Savi Horne appeared first on Edge Effects .
Dec 12, 2017•43 min
To be outside the "home" was a dangerous place to be in Gilded Age America. Richard White tells the story of how the modern nation reluctantly came into being alongside the environmental crisis of the late nineteenth century. The post Making the Nation in the Gilded Age: A Conversation with Richard White appeared first on Edge Effects .
Nov 28, 2017•34 min
Two centuries ago, Ojibwe people planned for seven generations to come. Today that seventh generation is fighting for the treaty rights their ancestors established and a just, sustainable future. The post We Are the Seventh Generation: A Conversation with Winona LaDuke appeared first on Edge Effects .
Nov 14, 2017•13 min
Making things right in the face of climate change demands that colonialism, race, and gender take center stage in the story of capitalism. The post The Case for Ecological Reparations: A Conversation with Jason W. Moore appeared first on Edge Effects .
Oct 31, 2017•47 min
Fertilizers, computers, gasoline, and other parts of our everyday lives come from irreplaceable deposits found in the Earth. But how long will they last? The post The Fragile Society We’ve Built from Rocks: A Conversation With Gregory Cushman appeared first on Edge Effects .
Oct 17, 2017•52 min
The author of "The Hamlet Fire" discusses a deadly blaze at a chicken-processing facility and the logics of cheapness which provided the kindling. The post How’d We Get So Cheap? A Conversation with Bryant Simon appeared first on Edge Effects .
Oct 03, 2017•46 min
The author of "The Mushroom at the End of the World" is back with another exploration of how humans and non-humans will make their lives in the ruins of modernity. The post The Best of End Times: A Conversation with Anna Tsing appeared first on Edge Effects .
Sep 19, 2017•50 min
A new history of the Ghost Dance shows Native Americans preparing to live within industrial capitalism and impoverished landscapes without succumbing to assimilation. The post A History Buried at Wounded Knee: A Conversation with Louis Warren appeared first on Edge Effects .
Sep 05, 2017•59 min
An important new essay collection avoids the old arguments about wilderness and instead offers 26 meditations on living well in our places. The post The Wild Bunch: A Conversation with Curt Meine and Gavin Van Horn appeared first on Edge Effects .
Aug 09, 2017•1 hr 27 min
We know nature is good for our brains. Can buildings be, too? A preeminent architectural critic calls for a radical shift in how we design the places where we live, work, and play. The post The (Built) Environmental Revolution: A Conversation with Sarah Williams Goldhagen appeared first on Edge Effects .
Aug 01, 2017•51 min
The French composer Olivier Messaien attempted to reproduce the calls of 80 European birds in a three-hour piece for solo piano. Did he succeed? The post Can a Piano Sing a Birdsong? appeared first on Edge Effects .
Jul 18, 2017•37 min
The author of the new book "Apollo in the Age of Aquarius" shows how NASA shaped, and was shaped by, 1960s environmentalism, feminism, conservatism, counterculture, antiwar protests, and the black freedom struggle. The post NASA and the Explosive 1960s: A Conversation with Neil Maher appeared first on Edge Effects .
Jun 20, 2017•58 min
When the mines closed throughout Wisconsin's Gogebic Range, its population collapsed. But many left their hearts there. Now some are even moving back. The post Love for Home in a Place Industry Left Behind appeared first on Edge Effects .
May 30, 2017•11 min
Ivy League institutions are scrambling to uncover their links to the history of slavery. But the University of Mississippi—built by slaves, amid slave plantations, for slaveowners to teach future slaveowners—might offer the richest insights into the nation's unshakable ties to centuries of bondage. The post Ole Miss and the Shadow of Slavery: A Conversation with Jeffrey Jackson and Charles Ross appeared first on Edge Effects ....
May 17, 2017•47 min
The preeminent environmental writer and conservationist ventures into the mountains of Laos to find one of Earth's rarest creatures and returns believing well-crafted narratives showcasing the beauty of nature can help to fight the Sixth Extinction. The post Hunting a Unicorn: A Conversation with William deBuys appeared first on Edge Effects .
May 02, 2017•36 min
What if today's climate activists acted more like the scientists who spoke out on the first Earth Day? The post The Trouble with the March for Science: A Conversation with Adam Rome appeared first on Edge Effects .
Apr 18, 2017•46 min
An urban history nearly devoid of people nonetheless holds lessons for communal human life today. The post Nature’s Metropolis Turns 25: A Conversation with William Cronon appeared first on Edge Effects .
Apr 04, 2017•51 min
The acclaimed cultural critic and author of "After Nature" set off to explore the uncharted depths of the Anthropocene. But he found Thoreau there waiting for him. The post Politics for a Maimed World: A Conversation with Jedediah Purdy appeared first on Edge Effects .
Mar 28, 2017•41 min
The biologist who became famous standing up to agribusiness reflects on the politics of science, getting mistaken for a conspiracy theorist, and the unexpected ways race and gender matter in the academy today. The post Learning from Einstein and Tupac: A Conversation with Tyrone Hayes appeared first on Edge Effects .
Mar 09, 2017•45 min
During this period of rapid political change, glass and Morse code provide mediums for reflection on the environment and extinction. The post Expressing Extinction: A Conversation with Anna Lehner appeared first on Edge Effects .
Feb 16, 2017•17 min
For many of us, mosquitos are an annoying fact of life in the summer. But for Dawn Biehler, they are also a symptom of social inequality. The post The Itchy Ecology of Segregation: A Conversation with Dawn Biehler appeared first on Edge Effects .
Jan 19, 2017•35 min
The importance of storytelling in elucidating and challenging understandings of race and the environment. The post Nature and the Rules of Race: A Conversation with Carolyn Finney appeared first on Edge Effects .
Dec 13, 2016•50 min
Andrew Stuhl discusses how we can “unfreeze” the Arctic's history and gain new insight into climate change and future possibilities. The post Is the Arctic Out of Time? A Conversation with Andrew Stuhl appeared first on Edge Effects .
Dec 01, 2016•44 min
Stressing intimacy, structures of power, social justice, and action, food studies is giving interdisciplinarity a good name. The post What is Food Studies? appeared first on Edge Effects .
Nov 15, 2016•17 min
A geologist turned award-winning writer reflects on the marks racism has left on the American landscape. The post The Land Doesn’t Hate: A Conversation with Lauret Savoy appeared first on Edge Effects .
Nov 10, 2016•35 min
A conversation about labor: labor on tea plantations, the labor of language, and the ways in which the Anthropocene invites labor-focused inquiry. The post Working Concepts: A Conversation with Sarah Besky appeared first on Edge Effects .
Mar 29, 2016•19 min