Quotidian Anthropocene
A digital collection for the Quotidian Anthropocene research project, field campus, and open seminar.
A digital collection for the Quotidian Anthropocene research project, field campus, and open seminar.
A digital collection of material for field activities with LEAN and the community members of Reserve LA/St John the Baptist Parish.
My interests center around soil--its preservation, regeneration, and remediation. Living farther up North on the Mississippi in Saint Louis has changed my thinking around the relationships between soil, water, and contamination. Saint Louis and New Orleans are linked not just through their shared river and its attendant water management issues, but through patterns of extraction and contamination. New Orleans may also provide some clues (and potential solutions) to my community's changing relationship with water as we confront climate change. My work as an artist explores our relationship with landscape through tours of contaminated sites and remediative interventions in the landscape, so I approach New Orleans with questions about contaminated environments and water management through landscape design, gardening, and education.
The effects of the Anthropocene (human-centric era) manifest differently, depending on geography. In Haiti, in particular, the quotidian life of diaster is imprinted in the landscape.
Haiti now has only 2% forest cover.
Racial Capitalocenic Geographies
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A PECE Essay for the St. Louis Field Campus.
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