Environmental History Now

@envhistnow
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EHN showcases the env-related work + expertise of grad students & ECRs who identify as women, trans and/or nonbinary people #EnvHist #EnvHum 🌱🌍
Websitehttps://envhistnow.com/
Podcasthttps://ecotonesnow.com/
Linktreehttps://linktr.ee/envhistnow

Join us for EHN's 7th Anniversary Week!

We're releasing a new essay everyday this week. First one up: Rae Ferner-Rose's "Strange Assemblages," on zoos and wildlife parks in the context of anthropogenic climate change and conservation discourse. #envhis #envhum

https://envhistnow.com/2025/09/15/strange-assemblages-the-environmental-uncanny-and-the-british-wildlife-park/

Strange Assemblages: The Environmental Uncanny and the British Wildlife Park

The zoo, a space that once spoke to human domination over nature, now proves a morally loaded stage on which the biodiversity crisis slips out of our hands.

Environmental History Now.

Thrilled to share Katherine Cheung's new post, crossposted with our friends at Edge Effects, on seeing vegetal timescales!

https://envhistnow.com/2024/10/15/plant-blindness-and-seeing-vegetal-timescales/

Plant Blindness and “Seeing” Vegetal Timescales

What is the concept of “plant blindness”? How can the arts help us to appreciate different timescales and plants’ ways of being?

Environmental History Now.

Today on EHN: Yolima Vargas GarzĂłn (@yoligrilla) reflects on the ongoing debate about hippos as invasive species in the Colombian Magdalena Basin.

https://envhistnow.com/2023/12/20/we-are-running-out-of-time-to-control-escobars-hippos/

#EnvHist #EnvHum

We Are Running Out of Time to Control Escobar’s Hippos

In 1981, four hippos from the United States arrived in Colombia, with another 1,200 animals, as part of a new, extravagant 2,000-hectare zoo in the Hacienda Nápoles.[1] This reserve, owned by the f…

Environmental History Now.

Anniversary Week Essay #1

Amelia Diehl's essay, "Premature Electrification," on the relationship between cars and petro-masculinity in a time of transition to electric vehicles.

https://envhistnow.com/2024/09/09/premature-electrification-petro-masculine-panic-in-the-ev-era/

“Premature Electrification”: Petro-masculine Panic in the EV Era

Among the varied significations circulating around the petroleum-powered car, the commodity has operated as a salient vehicle for expressions and tools of hetero-masculinity.

Environmental History Now.

Anniversary Week Retrospective #5

A retrospective featuring the life world of plants, animals, and water, featuring essays by Nicole Hodgson, Yolima Vargas GarzĂłn ([email protected]), and Lucile Truffy.

https://envhistnow.com/2024/09/13/ehn-anniversary-week-retrospective/

EHN’s 6th Anniversary Retrospective

To wrap up this year’s anniversary week, the EHN team would like to showcase three essays featuring the life world of plants, animals, and water.

Environmental History Now.

Anniversary Week Essay #4

Araceli Ramos's "The Role of Natural History Museums in Conservation Science and Communication," exploring the potentials of natural history museums for public education+outreach, raising issues of conservation, and the study of biodiversity.

https://envhistnow.com/2024/09/12/the-role-of-natural-history-museum-collections-in-conservation-science-and-communication/

The Role of Natural History Museum Collections in Conservation Science and Communication

In an era marked by a pressing global climate crisis and alarming rates of biodiversity loss, natural history museums stand out as beacons of hope in our collective struggle against environmental d…

Environmental History Now.

Anniversary Week Essay #3

Teja Šosterič's essay from NiCHE, "Turning the Tide," a queer reading of orcas that corrects biases, giving female orcas their due!

https://envhistnow.com/2024/09/11/turning-the-tide-a-queer-look-at-the-orca/

Turning the Tide: A Queer Look at the Orca

I no longer think that science holds little or no bias. Through entrenching heteronormativity and patriarchy, biases hurt not only the queer community but all communities, because they display a sk…

Environmental History Now.

Anniversary Week Essay #2

Caroline Kreysel's "The Raised Bog Underneath the Farm," a rumination on multiple temporalities and nonhuman agents of the Peel, bog landscapes, and sphagnum moss.

https://envhistnow.com/2024/09/10/the-raised-bog-underneath-the-farm-walking-into-the-past-and-the-present/

The Raised Bog Underneath the Farm: Walking into the Past and the Present

Throughout the past 150 years, the Peel underwent drastic changes due to drainage projects, turf-cutting, and animal farming. The new materialities these uses produced can make one almost forget th…

Environmental History Now.

It's our Anniversary Week!

EHN is an independent, volunteer-run platform that features the voices of graduate students and ECR who identify as women, trans, and/or non-binary!

If you’d like to support our efforts —please donate! ✍️ 📝 ☕️ #envhist #envhum

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Anniversary Week Essay #1

Amelia Diehl's essay, "Premature Electrification," on the relationship between cars and petro-masculinity in a time of transition to electric vehicles.

https://envhistnow.com/2024/09/09/premature-electrification-petro-masculine-panic-in-the-ev-era/

“Premature Electrification”: Petro-masculine Panic in the EV Era

Among the varied significations circulating around the petroleum-powered car, the commodity has operated as a salient vehicle for expressions and tools of hetero-masculinity.

Environmental History Now.