Monthly Archives: February 2024

post #4 in the series, from the preface to my book in progress, Upcycling Ecopoetry

Here’s an intriguing idea.  Poetry’s relative marginalization within the domain of commercial culture gives it freedom and a different kind of power—the ability to negate what passes for “realist” and “practical” majoritarian thinking, including that tech interventions on their own will miraculously fix … Continue reading

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post #3 in the series, from my book in progress Upcycling Ecopoetry

Upcycling will join other books arguing that the crucial changes that must come will be primarily driven by global populist movements for restorative justice for people, ecosystems, and the planet.  Established institutions, technological interventions, markets, and other factors will have to play … Continue reading

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Post #2 in the series, from the preface to Upcycling Ecopoetry

“Change the story” doesn’t guarantee success.  There’s plenty of contemporary skepticism about what Parul Sehgal, Amit Chaudhuri, Christian Salmon, and others have called the contemporary “narrative turn” in many fields, including medicine, religion, and law, not to mention cultural studies like … Continue reading

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Post #1 in a series, all from the preface of my book in progress, _Upcycling Ecopoetry_

“Maybe what seeks us is better than what we seek.” —Ben Okri, Astonishing the Gods “In a time of destruction, create something.” —Maxine Hong Kingston “It is so hard to write books about climate change that people want to read,” NPR … Continue reading

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Disinformation and unintended irony

In Apple’s famous 1984 Macintosh commercial, a portion of the dictator’s blurry text (on the right in this image) says that “the poisonous needs of disinformation will be consigned to the dustbin of history.” So one of the ways authoritarianism … Continue reading

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