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Shengjia-Ashley's picture

A book took me back to Colorado

Reading An Unspoken Hunger by Terry Tempest Williams, I felt her obvious passion for the earth and especially the western desert. Her love for the land, her eloquence in advocating environment protection and the detailed and vivid description of water, rock, and land was so engaging that she drew back a lot of missing memories I had when I visited Colorado. I felt the dry wind blowing on my face again, I felt thirsty in my throat, I heard the country songs in my mind and I smelt the salty and subtle smell of the rocks.

jhunter's picture

Memo #2: Religion in Prisons

I explored the reasons behind and issues that complicate the dissemination of religion in prisons.  Both images show examples of religious activity by incarcerated individauls.

Inmates at a servicePrisoner with cross

hirakismail's picture

Web Paper Event # 3

Hira Ismail

Ecological Imaginings

Cross-Cultural “Nature” Writing

Anne Dalke's picture

Planning Our Collective Ramble (Dec. 3)

We have agreed to share a collective ramble during class time next Monday, December 3. We will gather @ the Mill Creek restoration site, in Ashbridge Park (a 10-minute walk from campus); and design the day along the lines of the "dynamic structure"  froggies315 proposed, dividing into groups of 2 or 3 each to
1) open and close the wander
2) locate us @ the site via some history
3) and also via some poetry
4) supply food to fuel our wandering off on our own
5) lead us before and after the day (on-line or in class) in reflection about what's happened.

In a comment to this post, please indicate which group you want to join. Attend to the comments before yours, and distribute yourself evenly...let's see if this works! We need to agree who will do what by classtime on Wednesday.

Thanks for working so ecologically!

A.

Sarah's picture

memo 2

I emailed my paper to Barb but forgot to post.  

I used this image, which Howard Zehr used in his powerpoint.  My paper was about how Zehr's work relates to our experiences in the Cannery and how photographic techniques, such as zooming in and zooming, have a similar effect to reframing the words we use to describe our experience in the Cannery.

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sdane's picture

Can I write in such a way that every time you read it, it tells a different story?

Short but interesting podcast with Maxine Hong Kingston: http://artworks.arts.gov/?p=13152

sara.gladwin's picture

last minute coetzee alternative

HI everyone- I had been planning to do the reading by taking the book out of reserves but its been out each time I checked so I began to look for alternatives in case I didn't get a chance to at least look over the reading before class. I ended up finding the lecture that "the lives of animals" is based on, delivered by Coetzee during a series of lectures at Princeton. I believe from what I led it has similar themes and uses the same alter ego that Coetzee uses. I posted the link below, I hope that helps anyone having similar issues getting the reading!

tannerlectures.utah.edu/lectures/documents/Coetzee99.pdf

sara.gladwin's picture

Planting a Garden of Ecological Literacy

This is a what-if paper. By writing this, I’m asking others to play the believe/doubt game along with me; I ask you to entertain these ideas in their possibilities but to retain a critical eye toward their infeasibilities.

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