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Author: Elizabeth Johnson

Antipode

47(1) and Other Good Things from Antipode

January 9, 2015 Elizabeth JohnsonUncategorized

The latest issue of Antipode is out today, freely available online, and chock full of great titles. I’m looking forward to reading several of these, including the two on green grabbing and another two on[…]

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Labban on Bioaccumulation and the Planetary Mine

June 12, 2014 Elizabeth JohnsonUncategorized

Image Credit: ingenuity lab Mazan Labban has a great piece in the Annals just out last month on “Deterritorializing Extraction,” which raises some important points about changing spaces of geo- and bio-capital as well as[…]

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HWK’s Forensis

May 28, 2014 Elizabeth JohnsonUncategorized

Pepe Romanillos recently drew my attention to HKW’s recent exhibition and project Forensis. Curated by Anselm Franke and Eyal Weizman with ties to the Forensic Architecture project at Goldsmith’s, Forensis explored the growing role of forensics[…]

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Beyond the Anthropocene’s common humanity

May 14, 2014May 15, 2014 Elizabeth JohnsonUncategorized

It is no secret that at Geocritique, we are as inspired by much of the work emerging around the concept of the Anthropocene as we are committed to critically intervening in how the term is[…]

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The Political Unconscious of the Anthropocene: A conversation with Frederic Neyrat

March 20, 2014March 20, 2014 Elizabeth JohnsonPublications

Recently, I had the pleasure of exchanging ideas with Frederic Neyrat. Over on Environment and Planning D’s Society and Space blog, you can read the full interview, where we discuss eco-politics, political imaginaries, and the Anthropocene. Folks,[…]

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“The work is going well, but it looks like it might be the end of the world”

January 20, 2014January 26, 2014 Elizabeth JohnsonEvents

New Yorkers take note: 1882 Woodbine St., a new collaborative space that opened recently in Ridgewood, Queens, is putting together an ongoing series of events and projects on living among the ruins of the Anthropocene.[…]

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  • 47(1) and Other Good Things from Antipode January 9, 2015

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