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Outputs (14)

Environmental Geography and the Inheritance of Western Technoscience (2022)
Journal Article
Lehman, J. S., & Johnson, E. (2022). Environmental Geography and the Inheritance of Western Technoscience. Progress in Environmental Geography, 1(1-4), 23-32. https://doi.org/10.1177/27539687221124613

How has environmental geography grappled with the inheritances of Western technoscience? On one hand, as a discipline, we are now well aware of science's entanglements with imperial projects and racist logics, not to mention the omissions and silence... Read More about Environmental Geography and the Inheritance of Western Technoscience.

Turbulent waters in three parts (2021)
Journal Article
Lehman, J., Steinberg, P., & Johnson, E. (2021). Turbulent waters in three parts. Theory and Event, 24(1), 192-219

While scientific accounts of ocean dynamics draw public attention to the turbulence of earthly matter, the science alone tells a truncated story. The ocean's turbulent materiality is more than material: practices of scientific knowledge and historica... Read More about Turbulent waters in three parts.

The Hydra and Leviathan: Unmanned Maritime Vehicles and the Militarized Seaspace (2019)
Book Chapter
Johnson, E. R. (2020). The Hydra and Leviathan: Unmanned Maritime Vehicles and the Militarized Seaspace. In I. Braverman, & E. R. Johnson (Eds.), Blue legalities : the life and law of the sea. Duke University Press

Just as aerial drones precipitated a shift in the logics and spaces of war, the rise of sea-going autonomous vehicles are changing military engagement in the ocean. In this chapter, Johnson considers how the rise of machinic warfare is reconstituting... Read More about The Hydra and Leviathan: Unmanned Maritime Vehicles and the Militarized Seaspace.

Geontographies: On Elizabeth Povinelli’s Geontologies: A Requiem for Late Liberalism (2019)
Journal Article
Johnson, E. R., Kindervater, G., Todd, Z., Yusoff, K., Woodward, K., & Povinelli, E. A. (2019). Geontographies: On Elizabeth Povinelli’s Geontologies: A Requiem for Late Liberalism. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, 37(8), 1319-1342. https://doi.org/10.1177/2399654419875148

This forum brings together perspectives from geography, philosophy, and political science to reflect on Elizabeth Povinelli’s, 2016 book, Geontologies: A Requiem for Late Liberalism. Contributions come from both junior and senior scholars across a ra... Read More about Geontographies: On Elizabeth Povinelli’s Geontologies: A Requiem for Late Liberalism.

At the Limits of Species Being: Sensing the Anthropocene (2017)
Journal Article
Johnson, E. R. (2017). At the Limits of Species Being: Sensing the Anthropocene. South Atlantic Quarterly, 116(2), 275-292. https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-3829401

Autonomous Marxism has generated a lexicon for responding to transformations in human labor, particularly around the role of technological development. Autonomists have mapped how the conditions of post-Fordism have put elements of the mind, sociabil... Read More about At the Limits of Species Being: Sensing the Anthropocene.

Reconsidering Mimesis: Freedom and Acquiescence in the Anthropocene (2016)
Journal Article
Johnson, E. R. (2016). Reconsidering Mimesis: Freedom and Acquiescence in the Anthropocene. South Atlantic Quarterly, 115(2), 267-289. https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-3488409

In 1993 Michael Taussig's Mimesis and Alterity revitalized the power of the mimetic faculty to craft a vision of nature that was neither the alienated subject of modern science nor the passively malleable medium of late twentieth-century social const... Read More about Reconsidering Mimesis: Freedom and Acquiescence in the Anthropocene.

Of Lobsters, Laboratories, and War: Animal Studies and the Temporality of More-Than-Human Encounters (2015)
Journal Article
Johnson, E. R. (2015). Of Lobsters, Laboratories, and War: Animal Studies and the Temporality of More-Than-Human Encounters. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 33(2), 296-313. https://doi.org/10.1068/d23512

For over two decades, geographers concerned with undoing what Judith Butler has referred to as ‘the conceit of anthropocentrism’ have brought animals in from the margins of thought. Geography's contributions to animal studies have been diverse, but a... Read More about Of Lobsters, Laboratories, and War: Animal Studies and the Temporality of More-Than-Human Encounters.