Environmental Humanities is an international, open-access journal that aims to invigorate current interdisciplinary research on the environment @DUKEpress
Our journal is looking for some new Associate Editors, including new editors for our Living Lexicon series. Applications due by Nov 3. See https://t.co/Xx80q9Cvqp for more details.
#envhum
That's it for this issue! You can find the whole table of contents here: https://t.co/6kLTpP78oE
As always, Environmental Humanities is free to read and free to publish in thanks to our sponsors and our support from @DukePress : https://t.co/La34tKcHjB
Julia D. Gibson explores a death ethic for those driven extinct by environmental injustices in
“Practicing Palliation for Extinction and Climate Change: Weaving Death Ethics from Story and Practice”
https://t.co/wDAHq2jH7H
We close off the Special Section with an afterword on "Ecological Inqueeries" by Juno Salazar Parreñas and Nicole Seymour @nseymourPHD reflecting: What is queer in queer ecologies? What is ecology in queer ecologies? And are queer ecologies white?
https://t.co/BfMZLdNxas
"Toxic Erotics and Bad Ecosex at Windermere Basin" by Astrida Neimanis @AstridaNeimanis insists on a version of ecosexual erotics that, while joyous, remains imbricated in fraught histories and complicities to build an affective politics of change.
https://t.co/jLY6LuAHDY