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This edited volume interrogates the role of media technologies in the formation of environments, understood both as physical spaces and as epistemological constructs about them. Using the concept of ‘environing media’, the book advances a deeper understanding of how media processes – defined here as the storage, process, and transmission of data – influence human-Earth relations. Virtually all aspects of the interconnected global ecological crisis can be related to the intensification and acceleration of scaling up the human imprint on the planet by technological means. Combining ideas from the humanities, arts, and humanistic social sciences, Environing Media offers a perspective on...
Willy Granqvist är en av det sena 1900-talets mest egensinniga poeter. Hans naket engagerade författarskap framstår idag som ett av tidens mest intima och nyskapande. Vid sidan av böckerna publicerade Granqvist en mängd dikter och andra texter i antologier, dagspress och tidskrifter. I denna volym, redigerad och kommenterad av poeten Krister Gustavsson, återfinns rikt varierade sådana från 1965-1985. WILLY GRANQVIST föddes 1948 i Mälarhöjden, Stockholm och gick bort genom självmord 1985. Han var anställd på Sveriges Radios kulturredaktion. Debuten i bokform skedde med diktsamlingen Kropparna och rummen (1975). Fram till 1985 gav han ut ytterligare sex diktsamlingar och två prosaböcker. Postumt publicerades långdikten Natten (1987), i nyutgåva i N/L:s poesibibliotek 2021. Förord av Krister Gustavsson.
This is the first history of phytotrons, huge climate-controlled laboratories that enabled plant scientists to experiment on the environmental causes of growth and development of living organisms. Made possible by computers and other modern technologies of the early Cold War, such as air conditioning and humidity control, phytotrons promised an end to global hunger and political instability, spreading around the world to thirty countries after World War II. The United States built nearly a dozen, including the first at Caltech in 1949. By the mid-1960s, as support and funding for basic science dwindled, phytotrons declined and ultimately disappeared—until, nearly thirty years later, the British built the Ecotron to study the impact of climate change on biological communities. By recalling the forgotten history of phytotrons, David P. D. Munns reminds us of the important role they can play in helping researchers unravel the complexities of natural ecosystems in the Anthropocene.
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