The AAG is pleased to announce that Volume 5, Issue 1 (June 2019) of GeoHumanities is now available. GeoHumanities is the newest journal of the American Association of Geographers. It features articles that span conceptual and methodological debates in geography and the humanities; critical reflections on analog and digital artistic productions; and new scholarly interactions occurring at the intersections of geography and multiple humanities disciplines.
There are full length scholarly articles in the GeoHumanities Articles section and shorter creative pieces that cross over between the academy and creative practice in the Practices and Curations section.
Each issue, the Editors choose one article to make freely available. In this issue you can read #OurChangingClimate: Building Networks of Community Resilience Through Social Media and Design, by Sheryl-Ann Simpson, N. Claire Napawan & Brett Snyder for free. To access the most recent issue of GeoHumanities click here.
AAG members receive online access to all past and current issues of GeoHumanities— go to the Members Only page and log in using your AAG member ID and password, then choose Publications on the top menu and navigate to the AAG Journals page.
If you are not an AAG member and would like to be, join here. Please direct questions regarding the GeoHumanities to geohumanities [at] aag [dot] org.
Table of Contents
Articles
Open Access: #OurChangingClimate: Building Networks of Community Resilience Through Social Media and Design, by Sheryl-Ann Simpson, N. Claire Napawan & Brett Snyder
Collective Unconscious: Climate Change and Responsibility in Ian McEwan’s Solar, by Chris Maughan
Retelling Time in Grassroots Sustainable Economy Movements, by Michelle Bastian
The Writing-Machine as Method: Affect, Acker, and the Traumatized Subject, by Freya Johnson
Dark Humor, Irony, and the Collaborative Narrativizations of Regional Belonging, by Juha Ridanpää
Soundscape and Heritage: The Sonic Environment in Roskilde Juxtaposed with James Joyce’s Ulysses, by Keld Buciek
Affect and Emotion with A World at Stake, by Sigurd Solhaug Nielsen & Stuart C. Aitken
In Pursuit of Necessary Joys: Deleuze, Spinoza, and the Ethics of Becoming Active, by Tom Roberts
Postphenomenology and Method: Styles for Thinking the (Non)Human, by James Ash & Paul Simpson
Community-Based Public Art and Gentrification in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, by Teréz Szőke & Kate Parizeau |
Articles (continued)
Henry James, Cartographer: Charting the Hologram of Venice in Italian Hours, by Lindsey Holmes
Traveling Masculinities on the Summit: Reappropriations and Disarticulations of Mountain Climbing Visions in “The Alps of Granada” (1868–1900), by Carlos Cornejo-Nieto
Deceptive Landscapes: Ornithological Hide Work and the Perception of Ospreys on Speyside, 1957–1987, by Ben Garlick
Practices and Curations
Rewriting the Disaster: Body-Bagged Earthworks, Postmortem Landscapes, and the De-Scription of Fukushima, by Marcus A. Doel
Some Small Fever: Picturing the Queer Domestic Uncanny—A Conversation with Bryson Rand, by Max J. Andrucki
What’s the Matter with Ghost Stories?, by John Paul Jones III
Performing Social Media: Artistic Approaches to Analyzing Big Data, by Tess Osborne, Emily Warner, Phil Ian Jones & Bernd Resch
“The Sky Is Hidden”: On the Opening Up of Language and National Borders, by Paul Magee, Elena Isayev & Aref Hussaini |