EcoCast: Environmental Conversations On Creative Art, Scholarship, and Teaching. The official podcast of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE). Each episode features interviews with guests sharing their scholarship, creative work, or teaching.
📻 Siste episoder av ASLE EcoCast Podcast
Her er de nyeste episodene tilgjengelige via RSS-feeden:
Cows in the Caribbean: Cattle Chat with Chaz and Andrew (00:57:22)
This month, we got to speak with Chaz Yingling and Andrew Kettler about their forthcoming book: The Once and the Future Cow. The book's aim is to show an understudied history of the cow not just in th...
Focusing on the "Wolf" in Werewolf: EcoGothic with Kaja Franck (00:56:30)
Kaja sat down with Lindsay and I this month to discuss how scholars typically focus on the "were" in the term werewolf, but she wants us to bring more focus to the "wolf" aspect. Why are we fascinated...
Expanding Our Sense of Ecofascism: Everyday Ecofascism with Alex Menrisky (01:03:15)
What is ecofascism and who "is" ecofascist or "does" ecofascism? Alex Menrisky walks us through why his new book is titled "Everyday Ecofascism," or the ways that ecofascism is not solely a far-right ...
Worshipping the Gas Station: Rethinking Energy with Bart Welling (00:49:46)
This month we had a fascinating conversation with Bart Welling, whose presentation at the ASLE Conference this last summer was caught by Lindsay! Bart's research was informed by his own road trip arou...
Becoming Botanical: Plant Life in Modern Japan (00:47:14)
This month we sat down with Jon Pitt to discuss his new book "Botanical Imagination: Rethinking Plants in Modern Japan." The book spans Japanese writers and filmmakers from the 1930s to today whose wo...
Defining Disaster, Defining Ecocinema: Taking a Closer Look at Japan with Rachel DiNitto (00:43:04)
For this month’s episode, we sat down with Rachel DiNitto to discuss the pioneering edited volume Eco-Disasters in Japanese Cinema (2024) and her own chapter in it on "Toxicoscapes." With thematic cov...
Environmentalisms: Latinx Catholicism and the Environment (00:42:20)
In this episode, Alex sat down with Amanda Baugh to chat about her new book, Falling in Love with Nature: The Values of Latinx Catholic Environmentalism. An ethnographic study of Hispanic Catholics, B...
One Day At A Time: Kate Rigby's Meditation on Creation (00:57:43)
For this episode, we sat down with Kate Rigby to discuss her new book Meditations on Creation in an Era of Extinction. The text is a reclaiming of the ancient theological meditation form, the hexamero...
Creating Coralations: Melody Jue and Finding New Coral Protagonists (00:45:47)
We sat down with Melody Jue for a second episode to discuss her new work Coralations, a fascinating deep dive into the coral we know and the coral we need to know. Though tropical corals inundate perc...
Building an Audio Series: BlueLab's "Mining for the Climate" (00:52:37)
This month's episode is a podcast about a podcast! We sat down with Nate Otjen and Jessica Ng, two of the leaders of the audio story series "Mining for the Climate," to discuss the audio documentary s...
Arrhythmic Time Keeping: Seasonality in the Anthropocene (00:36:59)
In this month's episode, we spoke with Sarah Dimick about her new book Unseasonable: Climate Change in Global Literatures. It connects literature and the environment through an idea of seasonality and...
What 'Might' The World Be, What Might It Become? Carolyn Fornoff's Subjunctive Aesthetics (00:45:23)
Today's episode begins a slight turn toward ecoaesthetics in the next few episodes, and we begin with Carolyn Fornoff's new book Subjunctive Aesthetics: Mexican Cultural Production in the Era of Clima...
Fighting Extinction in the Field: A Conversation with Two North Carolina Extinction Biologists (00:46:36)
In the final episode of our extinction series, we chatted with two extinction biologists, Hope Sutton and Sara Schweitzer, who work for the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. Sara is the as...
Frameworks of Extinction and Negation in Cinema: A conversation with Jean-Thomas Tremblay and Steven Swarbrick (00:49:47)
In this second episode of our ongoing extinction series, we sit down with Jean-Thomas Tremblay and Steven Swarbrick to discuss their thought-provoking co-written manuscript, Negative Life: The Cinema ...
Should Humans Go Extinct? Asking the Big Question with Todd May (00:48:17)
In this first episode of our extinction series, we met with Todd May to discuss his new book Should We Go Extinct? A Philosophical Dilemma for Our Times. This massive question is accessibly analyzed y...
Finding the "Symphony Inside You" - Nadia Colburn's I Say The Sky Poetry Collection (00:40:42)
In this episode, we met with Nadia Colburn to discuss her new poetry collection I Say the Sky! Deeply engaged with the ecological collapse happening around us while also reinvesting in our own existen...
Polar Newspapers and Textual Production in Extreme Environments: Polar Series Finale! (00:50:43)
In our final episode of our polar environmental humanities series, we have Penn State English professor Hester Blum on to discuss her environmental humanities research on polar ecomedia! Dr. Blum disc...
(Mis)Conceptions of Antarctica with Dr. Leane! (00:41:44)
In our second episode of our polar environmental humanities series, we jump from the landscape paintings of the circumpolar north to the southern continent of Antarctica and speak with Dr. Elizabeth L...
Landscape Paintings of the Circumpolar North: Polar Environmental Humanities Series Episode 1 (00:54:07)
This is the first episode in our polar environmental humanities series with Dr. Isabelle Gapp from the University of Aberdeen! We met to discuss her new book, "A Circumpolar Landscape", and the fascin...
Making Photography Material: Siobhan Angus and The Elemental History of Photography (00:44:13)
Our conversation with Professor Angus discusses her brand-new book Camera Geologica: An Elemental History of Photography. As the title suggests, Angus connects photography with the materials that make...
Agrotopias: Abby Goode and the Imagined Elsewheres of American Sustainability Rhetoric (00:41:27)
Our conversation with Professor Goode explores her recent book Agrotopias: An American Literary History of Sustainability. Two recent phrases form the impetus of her book: "We Can't Solve the Climate ...
Farewelcome (00:44:50)
This episode is a goodbye and a hello. Brandon Galm, the creator of EcoCast in 2020 and co-host since its inception, is now stepping away from the podcast to make more time for his new roles at Cloud ...
This Episode is a Whale Oiled Machine: A Conversation with Jamie L. Jones and the History of Whaling (00:39:50)
Many apologies for the whale pun in the title, but Brandon can never resist. This month he and Lindsay chat with Jamie L. Jones, author of Rendered Obsolete: Energy Culture and the Afterlife of US Wha...
Special Episode: ASLE/AESS Conference Conversations (00:36:38)
This month’s episode was recorded live throughout the ASLE/AESS Conference in July 2023 in Portland. Brandon had the opportunity to set up a table at the conference and the five wonderful people who y...
“The Paradox of Place”: Appalachian Ecocriticism with Laura Wright and Jessica Cory (00:52:18)
In this episode, Lindsay and Brandon are joined by Laura Wright and Jessica Cory to discuss their recent edited collection Appalachian Ecocriticism and the Paradox of Place. The episode kicks off with...
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