Academic literature on the topic 'Climate change photography'

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Journal articles on the topic "Climate change photography"

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Lam, Anita, and Matthew Tegelberg. "Witnessing glaciers melt: climate change and transmedia storytelling." Journal of Science Communication 18, no. 02 (2019): A05. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.18020205.

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The Extreme Ice Survey (EIS) is an exemplary case for examining how to effectively communicate scientific knowledge about climate change to the general public. Using textual and semiotic analysis, this article analyzes how EIS uses photography to produce demonstrative evidence of glacial retreat which, in turn, anchors a transmedia narrative about climate change. As both scientific and visual evidence, photographs have forensic value because they work within a process and narrative of witnessing. Therefore, we argue that the combination of photographic evidence with transmedia storytelling off
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Fox, A. J., and A. P. R. Cooper. "Climate-change indicators from archival aerial photography of the Antarctic Peninsula." Annals of Glaciology 27 (1998): 636–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/1998aog27-1-636-642.

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Aerial photography has been used as a mapping tool in the Antarctic Peninsula region sinre the late 1920s. Following pioneering work by Wilkins in 1928, Ellsworth in 1934 and the British Graham Land Expedition in 1934-37, the Falkland Islands and Dependencies Aerial Survey Expedition carried out extensive aerial photography during the period 1955-57. Since then, many other aerial surveys have been carried out, and the result is an archive of aerial photography that, for some localities, spans 40 years. The production of maps both from different generations of photographs and satellite images h
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Kurnia S F, Aka, and Muhammad Syukron Anshori. "TAMBORA SEBUAH PERJALANAN VISUAL." Jurnal TAMBORA 4, no. 1 (2020): 69–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.36761/jt.v4i1.578.

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The purpose of this research is to reflect back 200 years of the eruption of Tambora on the island of Sumbawa, West Nusa Tenggara through travel with a photographic study approach, specifically travel photography. Since its inception, photography has played a constitutive role in shaping a travel record, this is also comparable to the importance of that role as a depiction of social identity (Osborne, 2000). In addition, travel photography is also a way to see experiences through visual authentication (Hilman Wendy, 2007). Mount Tambora erupted in April 1815, impacting global climate change an
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Fitchett, Jennifer M., Stefan W. Grab, and Dave I. Thompson. "Plant phenology and climate change." Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment 39, no. 4 (2015): 460–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309133315578940.

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Phenology, the timing of annually recurrent reproductive biological events, provides a critical signal of climate variability and change effects on plants. Considerable work over the past five decades has quantified the extent to which plant phenophases are responding to local changes in temperature and rainfall. Originally undertaken through the analysis of ground-based phenological observations, the discipline has more recently included phenophase indicators from satellite images and digital repeat photography. With research advances it has become evident that the responses of plant phenolog
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Anderson, Ryan. "Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, and the Slow Erosion of “Home”." Practicing Anthropology 41, no. 3 (2019): 38–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/0888-4552.41.3.38.

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Abstract This photo essay explores the growing challenges of coastal erosion and sea level rise through a personal reflection about coastal California. The author combines photography, ethnographic research, and personal experience to reflect upon the social, political, and environmental changes that rising seas are bringing to the world's coastlines. The essay emphasizes the power of using anthropology, framed by locally-based perspectives and knowledge, as a way to understand the broader global issues of climate change, erosion, and sea level rise.
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Fensham, R. J., and R. J. Fairfax. "Assessing woody vegetation cover change in north-west Australian savanna using aerial photography." International Journal of Wildland Fire 12, no. 4 (2003): 359. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wf03022.

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Models to calibrate tree and shrub cover assessed from aerial photography with field measurements were developed for a range of vegetation types in north-western Australia. The models verify previous studies indicating that woody cover can be successfully determined from aerial photography. The calibration models were applied to estimates of woody vegetation cover determined for 279 randomly located sample areas in the Ord–Victoria Rivers region using aerial photography from 1948 to 1950 and 1988 to 1997. Overstorey cover increased from a regional average of 11.5% to 13.5% and understorey cove
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Fairfax, R. J., and R. J. Fensham. "Corrigendum to: Assessing woody vegetation cover change in north-west Australian savanna using aerial photography." International Journal of Wildland Fire 13, no. 1 (2004): 131. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wf03022_co.

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Models to calibrate tree and shrub cover assessed from aerial photography with field measurements were developed for a range of vegetation types in north-western Australia. The models verify previous studies indicating that woody cover can be successfully determined from aerial photography. The calibration models were applied to estimates of woody vegetation cover determined for 279 randomly located sample areas in the Ord–Victoria Rivers region using aerial photography from 1948 to 1950 and 1988 to 1997. Overstorey cover increased from a regional average of 11.5% to 13.5% and understorey cove
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Rohde, Richard F., M. Timm Hoffman, Ian Durbach, Zander Venter, and Sam Jack. "Vegetation and climate change in the Pro-Namib and Namib Desert based on repeat photography: Insights into climate trends." Journal of Arid Environments 165 (June 2019): 119–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaridenv.2019.01.007.

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Trott, Carlie D. "Reshaping our world: Collaborating with children for community-based climate change action." Action Research 17, no. 1 (2019): 42–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1476750319829209.

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This paper documents a collaborative, multi-site participatory action research project in collaboration with children to act on climate change within local community settings. The project was an after-school program that combined hands-on climate change educational activities with photovoice, a participatory action research method that uses digital photography as the basis for problem identification, group dialogue, and social change action. Grounded in transformative sustainability learning theory and integrated with an arts-based participatory action research methodology, the program was des
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Poudel, Jiban Mani. "Pond Becomes a Lake: Challenges Posed by Climate Change in the Trans-Himalayan Regions of Nepal." Journal of Forest and Livelihood 16, no. 1 (2018): 87–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/jfl.v16i1.22884.

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Satellite images, repeated photography, temperature and precipitation data, and other proxy scientific evidences support the claim that climate is changing rapidly in Nepal, including in the Trans-Himalayan regions of the country. Climate change in the Trans-Himalayan region of Nepal is altering the existing relations of functional socio-ecological system for generations. This ethnographic assessment of Nhāson village looks at the disturbance posed by climate change to the social and ecological relationship in reference to livestock management practices. It focuses on two thematic areas of com
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Climate change photography"

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Bream, Sally. "Unveiling climate change at Pevensey Levels : a photographic documentation of a landscape in the temperate climate of Southern England." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2016. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/65404/.

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My photographic research intends to locate and document signs of climate change within the landscape of Pevensey Levels. This is significant in that within the relatively temperate climate of South East England, the phenomenon of climate change does not initially seem to be noticeable to the human eye. The project aims to integrate theory and practice in order to generate a reciprocal dialogue between the two endeavours. The photographic fieldwork has informed my choices of theoretical texts and I have then analysed these in order to further consider the notion of climate change visibility. In
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Duncan, John A. "Aloe Pillansii on Cornell's Kop : are population changes a result of intrinsic life history patterns or climate change?" Bachelor's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25928.

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Aloe pillansii populations in the biodiversity hotspot of the Succulent Karoo in Southern Africa are thought to be under threat of extinction. This study investigated the population at the type locality; Cornell's Kop in the Richtersveld, South Africa. It has been suggested that theft, animal damage and more recently climate change have caused a decline in the population by over 50% in the last decade, however very little is known about this rare species. Repeat photography and surveys were used to analyse life history patterns and dynamics of the population and thus establish what the potenti
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Smith, Alison M. "Forest ecology in a changing world : effective ground-based methods for monitoring temperate broadleaved forest ecosystem dynamics in relation to climate change." Thesis, University of Plymouth, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/11979.

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The impacts of climate change on temperate forests are predicted to accelerate, with widespread implications for forest biodiversity and function. Remote sensing has provided insights into regional patterns of vegetation dynamics, and experimental studies have demonstrated impacts of specific changes on individual species. However, forests are diverse and complex ecosystems. To understand how different species in different forests respond to interacting environmental pressures, widespread ground-based monitoring is needed. The only practical way to achieve this is through the involvement of no
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Eastment, Conor. "How has woody vegetation changed in north-east Namibia in response to land use, climate and fire?" Master's thesis, Faculty of Science, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32258.

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Bush encroachment or the thickening of woody vegetation is a phenomenon occurring throughout savannas, which tends to be more pronounced in small protected areas. The consequences of bush encroachment are often negative for the conservation of biodiversity, for the promotion of tourism and the prevention of wildfires. Hence, effective monitoring of woody vegetation and the factors which influence its spread are essential. This is particularly the case for protected areas such as that of Bwabwata National Park (BNP) in north-east Namibia. With a complex land use history and different fire manag
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Vinyeta, Kirsten. "A Cultural Snapshot: Exploring the Value of Community Photography for the Coquille Indian Tribe in a Climate Change Era." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/17880.

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Like many American Indian tribes, the Coquille Indian Tribe of Oregon has endured long struggles to preserve its cultural traditions despite the impacts of colonization. Now, advancing climate change poses additional threats to indigenous ways of life. In recent decades, the Coquille have archived historical documents and photographs as a means to protect and assert their tribal sovereignty. There has also been a surge in photography within the Tribe to document contemporary tribal activities. Community photography may be a useful tool for the purpose of asserting tribal culture and self-deter
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Matthews, Jamie. ""Seeing is believing" : A visual communication approach to Climate Change, through the Extreme Ice Survey." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Institutionen för kultur och lärande, 2015. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-29931.

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Communication plays a fundamental role in shaping our understanding of complex issues such as climate change. Too often scientists and journalists complain that the public does not fully comprehend climate change as they cannot see it. Adhering to calls for a need to propel away from media representations of climate change to a focus on more case-specific research, this Master Thesis analyses the aspect of visualisation within climate change communication with a focus on a contemporary example, the Extreme Ice Survey (EIS), as a case-specific study. EIS give a visual voice to our planets chang
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Hoolachan, Andrew. "Scalar politics : sustainability planning under Localism and the delivery of London's Olympic legacy." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2017. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/269398.

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This thesis seeks to address a research gap concerning the relationship between the Localism Act 2011 and planning’s central purpose of achieving sustainable development. In addition it uses a physical example in urban space to illustrate the main arguments, and in doing so adds to the growing literature on the various outcomes since the Localism Act was enforced across England in 2011. The thesis asks four inter-related questions: Firstly, regarding the theoretical bases of sustainability and localism from the various ontologies of ‘scale’ and ‘the natural’; secondly, regarding the general co
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Greenwood, Sarah. "Investigating the response of subtropical forests to environmental variation through the study of the Abies kawakamii treelines in Taiwan." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21561.

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Altitudinal treeline advance represents a sensitive and well-studied example of species response to climate warming. Although a great deal of work has been conducted globally, few studies have considered subtropical alpine treelines and little is known about their structure and function. This research aims to investigate the response of high altitude forests in Taiwan to climate variation by characterising treeline advance in the area, exploring the mechanisms driving the advance, and considering the consequences of advance for the wider community. The thesis consists of a general introduction
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Sharp, Michael G. "Ghost Water Exhibition." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2017. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6272.

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The Ghost Water exhibition of artworks by Michael Sharp was comprised of four main works titled: 30 x 60 Minute Grid Series, Suspension, History/Prehistory, and Lake Bonneville Remnants. The artwork was created as a reaction to the land that once held the prehistoric Lake Bonneville and to its current remnant Great Salt Lake. The work explores the dialogue between absence and presence.
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Jägerskog, Mattias. "Naturligt farligt : Hur visualiseringar av klimatförändringar är laddade med tecken och känslor." Thesis, Örebro University, School of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-9187.

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<p>The purpose of this thesis was to examine the relationship between feelings and visualizations of climate change. A case study was done on visualizations of climate change from a web page concerning climate change published by the Swedish newspaper <em>Expressen </em>and from the American photographer Gary Braasch’s web page “World view of global warming”. The thesis is based on the article ”Emotional anchoring and objectification in the media reporting on climate change” by Birgitta Höijer. I have been aiming to understand the feelings of fear, hope, guilt, compassion and nostalgia through
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Books on the topic "Climate change photography"

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When it changed. Steidl, 2008.

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Polar obsession. National Geographic, 2009.

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Nicklen, Paul. Polar obsession. National Geographic, 2009.

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Nicklen, Paul. Polar obsession. National Geographic, 2009.

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Juneau, Jane Dove. Listen to the heartbeat of the earth: Reconnecting with the universe, imagery to spark consciousness. South Pacific Light Press, 2008.

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McGinnies, William J. Changes in vegetation and land use in eastern Colorado: A photographic study, 1904 to 1986. United States Dept. of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, 1991.

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The Human Face of Climate Change. Hatje Cantz Publishers, 2011.

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The Edge of the Earth: Climate Change in Photography and Video. Black Dog Press, 2016.

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M, Turner R., and Hastings James Rodney, eds. The changing mile revisited: An ecological study of vegetation change with time in the lower mile of an arid and semiarid region. University of Arizona Press, 2003.

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Burt, Stephen, and Tim Burt. Oxford Weather and Climate since 1767. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198834632.001.0001.

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Oxford Weather and Climate since 1767 provides a detailed description and analysis of the weather records made at the Radcliffe Observatory in Oxford, the longest continuous series of single-site weather records in Britain and one of the longest in the world. The earliest records date from 1767, and daily records are unbroken since November 1813. The records allow the reconstruction of 200-year temperature and rainfall series and places the Oxford records in the context of long-term climate change. In this, the first full publication of the entire dataset, the long Oxford record is both celebr
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Book chapters on the topic "Climate change photography"

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"How Photography Matters: On Producing Meaning in Photobooks on Climate Change." In Image Politics of Climate Change. transcript-Verlag, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/transcript.9783839426104.273.

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"Picturing the State of the Nation’s Environment: Early Aerial Photography in the United States from the 1930s to the late 1960s." In Image Politics of Climate Change. transcript-Verlag, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/transcript.9783839426104.325.

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"Wear Your Shelter: Climate Change Photography and Mary Mattingly’s Nomadographies." In Picturing America. Brill | Rodopi, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004385474_009.

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Orvell, Miles. "Picturing Climate Change: “It’s the Apocalypse”." In Empire of Ruins. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190491604.003.0008.

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Ecological awareness goes back at least to Henry David Thoreau in the mid-nineteenth century, but it is only in the late twentieth century that a broader awareness emerged, centering on the effects of a changing climate on the Earth’s surface. The cataclysmic terror of Hurricane Katrina was most vividly photographed by Robert Polidori, among a dozen other New Orleans photographers, and his work is examined in this chapter. A different approach is taken by John Ganis, who has concentrated on the coastal regions of the East and Gulf states and has provided the perspective of a long-range view. Both photographers reveal the fragility of material structures, in which the movement from order to chaos can create shocking images of our disrupted environment. Yet another perspective is taken in the work of James Balog, whose time-lapse photographs and movies have disclosed the melting of polar glaciers at a speed that has startled scientists, even while it has confirmed the worst fears of climate change and the ruins it entails. The chapter concludes with a consideration of the way two popular climate movies by Roland Emmerich have imagined climate disaster, and the ambiguities of such representations.
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Graf, William L. "Reparian Vegetation." In Plutonium and the Rio Grande. Oxford University Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195089332.003.0011.

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The interaction among water, sediment, landforms, and human environmental manipulation on the Northern Rio Grande has produced a distinctive assemblage of plants in the riparian (or near-channel) community. The fluvial landforms and the sediment of which they are composed are often not immediately visible in field investigations because of the dense cover of riparian vegetation. In aerial photography—the primary source of data for historical river-channel change and sedimentation- riparian vegetation is often the only aspect of the near-channel environment that is amenable to interpretation and mapping. Vegetation also provides information about the date of emplacement of the sediments on which it grows, information useful in tracking contaminants introduced into the system during known time periods. Vegetation communities therefore provide useful keys to identifying the distribution of near-channel sediments and the contaminants they contain. This chapter briefly reviews the origin and changes in riparian vegetation in the study area, including its connections with geomorphic systems. Almost all major rivers in the American Southwest have undergone considerable geomorphic and vegetation change since the early nineteenth century when channel margins were the sites of bogs, lakes, abandoned meanders (sloughs), and marshes. Most major rivers had broad, sandy channels with braided configurations and meandering low-flow channels. Even small tributaries had marshy areas created by beavers. The riparian vegetation originally evolved in association with frequent extensive flooding. Removal of the beavers, the development of gullies and arroyos, land-management schemes, changes in climate, and the construction of dams changed the streams into single-thread or compound channels that flooded less often. The Rio Grande’s recent history is typical of the larger region except for the extensive recent engineering works that restrict the active channel and flood plains. There are few detailed descriptions of the channel and riparian vegetation before major human intervention, but generally, most firsthand observers indicate that the Northern Rio Grande was broad and shallow, with meandering subchannels frequently altered by flooding. After channel migration, cottonwood, willow, and cattail colonized the newly exposed alluvial surfaces. Early in the twentieth century, the cottonwood groves near the river rarely developed trees more than about 10 m high before more changes in the channel destroyed them.
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"List of Figures and Photographs." In Climate change, consumption and intergenerational justice. Bristol University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvnp0m2d.3.

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Balog, James. "Photographic Explorer of Human Tectonics and the Anthropocene." In World Scientific Encyclopedia of Climate Change. World Scientific, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789811213946_0034.

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Orvell, Miles. "Conclusion." In Empire of Ruins. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190491604.003.0009.

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The conclusion of Empire of Ruins recalls the book’s examination of ruin photography as it relates to modernity—the traumas of war and climate change. But it places that narrative within a larger context by relating this theory of American ruins to a historical conjunction between ruins and revolution that has been visible in European history for centuries. Most notably, it is visible in Hubert Robert, who painted ruins during the French Revolution, and in Joseph Gandy, who depicted John Soane’s Bank of England as a future ruin, emerging from the financial crisis of the 1820s. Thomas Jefferson, during the American Revolution, had the same fear of future ruin that Thomas Cole had in his epic series, The Course of Empire, painted in the 1830s. And in the revolutionary moment of the Great Depression, Stephen Vincent Benét imagined—in a classic work of speculative fiction—a future world in which the ruins of the present world would be discovered. That same trope, recalling Doré’s New Zealander, is used by contemporary artist Ellen Harvey in her satiric sculptural installation, The Alien’s Guide to the Ruins of Washington, D.C. The book ends with a reflection on J. B. Jackson’s famous argument for the necessity of ruins and whether our present trajectory will allow us to begin again.
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"The Pensive Photograph as Agent: What Can Non–Illustrative Images Do to Galvanize Public Support for Climate Change Action?" In Image Politics of Climate Change. transcript-Verlag, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/transcript.9783839426104.299.

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Dicaprio, Lisa. "From Women and Work to Climate Change Activism." In Reshaping Women's History. University of Illinois Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252042003.003.0005.

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The chapter explains how the author’s political activism in the 1970s and 1980s, including the cofounding of Chicago Women in Trades, which began as a support group for women carpenters, and structural changes in the academy in the 2000s framed the three main phases of a nontraditional path to and within academia. The journey has included focused work on women, work, and social welfare during the French Revolution, human rights and international justice, and sustainability literacy and climate change activism. The 2002 Catherine Prelinger Award allowed travel to the Balkans to carry out research and produce a public history photographic exhibit on the international campaign for justice for the survivors of the genocide in Srebrenica.
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