Dolly Jørgensen
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dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Dolly Jørgensen
@dollyjorgensen.bsky.social

Environmental historian. Professor Univ of Stavanger. Co-director Greenhouse Center for #envhum. Co-editor Environmental Humanities journal. Extinction; animal history.
New book: The Medieval Pig (Boydell 2024) https://boydellandbrewer.com/9781837651689/th .. more

Dolly Jørgensen is Professor of History at University of Stavanger, Norway and co-editor in Chief of Environmental Humanities. She served as president of the European Society for Environmental History, 2013–2017. Her research ranges from medieval to contemporary environmental issues, approached through environmental history, history of technology, and environmental humanities perspectives. Her primary areas of interest are human-animal relations, the urban environment, and environmental policymaking. Her research has been covered in media such as The New Yorker and Bioscience. She holds a PhD in History from University of Virginia (2008), a MA in history from University of Houston (2003), and a BA in Civil Engineering from Texas A&M University (1994). .. more

Environmental science 24%
History 18%
Pinned
Ghosts Behind Glass has been officially published by @uchicagopress.bsky.social!

If you are looking for an absolutely gorgeous book that tackles a deeply serious topic, this is a perfect choice. Would make a really thoughtful Christmas gift.

press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/bo...
Ghosts Behind Glass
How museums display extinct species—and what these exhibits say about us.   While it’s no longer possible to encounter a dodo in the wild, we can still come face-to-face with them in museums. The rema...
press.uchicago.edu

Reposted by Claire Connolly

Finally we have two new entries in the Living Lexicon for the Environmental Humanities:
"Hurakán Culture" by Yairen Jerez Columbié
read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

"Metabolism" by Molly MacVeagh
read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

Reposted by Joanna Brück

Commentary: "Animals Give Us a Body We Didn’t Have: An Interview with Vinciane Despret" features Iwona Janicka, Stephen Muecke, & Vinciane Despret in conversation on how the dead, animals, and people animate each other.
Animals Give Us a Body We Didn’t Have | Environmental Humanities | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu

Ana Croegaert & Amy Leia McLachlan, "Museum Work as Protection Beyond the Human: Co-Curating Possibility at the Intersection of COVID-19, Race, and Environment" explores possible museum praxis that reflects intersecting vulnerabilities of racialized communities surviving the COVID-19 pandemic
Museum Work as Protection Beyond the Human | Environmental Humanities | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu

Provocation: Bob Frame et al (incl @widewhitestage.bsky.social) , "Monuments for the End of the World?: Antarctic Heritage Ecology in the Early Anthropocene" proposes a role for #envhum in formalizing a shift from predominantly historical to increasingly futures-focused heritage.
Monuments for the End of the World? | Environmental Humanities | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu

Article 7: Kregg Hetherington, "The Time of Ghost Rivers" explores a ghost river in Montreal, its various revivals in the present, and the halting attempts by urban actors to form relations with it.
read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

Article 6: Kristoffer Balslev Willert & Nicolai Knudsen, "Anthropocentrism in the Anthropocene: Toward an Ostensive Humanism" clarifies the merits and limitations of both anthropocentric and post-anthropocentric views in ethics and ontology, then outlines a minimal form of anthropocentrism.
Anthropocentrism in the Anthropocene | Environmental Humanities | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu

Article 5: Justin Gaudry & Stephen Healy, "Matter, Consciousness, and the Anthropocene: Panpsychism Encounters Vital Materialism and Historical Materialism" analyses the value of panpsychist theory, which holds that consciousness is a fundamental and ubiquitous property of the natural world.
Matter, Consciousness, and the Anthropocene | Environmental Humanities | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu

Article 4: Patrick Anthony Barbosa Brock, "Synchronization and Spectacle as a Community Response to Forever Chemicals" proposes speculative communities address the deep entanglement of fluorosurfactants with ants, humans, transnational capital, international treaties, and temporality.
Synchronization and Spectacle as a Community Response to Forever Chemicals | Environmental Humanities | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu

Article 3: @wombatscholar.bsky.social, "Gathering Dust: Perceivability, Breathability, and Grievability in Modern Atmospheres" on the 9/11 World Trade Center dust & ashes as both valued as remains of loved ones and feared as toxic residue
read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

Article 2: Austin Lillywhite, "What Is a 'Plant-Human'?: Caribbean Trans Ecologies in Suzanne Césaire and Shani Mootoo" argues that the allegorical plant-human demonstrates the capacity of gendered embodying & geopolitical longue durée of bodies set in motion to fuel racial capitalism.
What Is a “Plant-Human”? | Environmental Humanities | Duke University Press
read.dukeupress.edu

Article 1: Rebecca Oh, "Apocalyptic Realism: Death and Life Amid Nuclear Infrastructures" which reads Idrissou Mora-Kpai’s documentary "Arlit, deuxième Paris" and Kathy Jetn̄il-Kijiner’s poem “Anointed” as examples of apocalyptic realism
read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

We also give a commendation to Alex Moulton for "Plotting a New Course for the Environmental Humanities: Provision Grounds, Race, and the Future" read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

We start with announcement of Environmental Humanities 2025 Best Article Prize which goes to (drumroll):

@susanneferwerda.bsky.social for "Blue Humanities and the Color of Colonialism" read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

Read the citation for the award:
read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

Reposted by Claire Connolly

The November 2025 issue of Environmental Humanities is out now! Check it out for all the lastest #envhum scholarship
read.dukeupress.edu/environmenta...

Cover image: A Marshall Islands navigation chart collected by Thomas William Smillie in 1899. Smithsonian Institution Archives.
Are you a PhD student & interested in using museum collections in your teaching or research?

We're running a *free* doctoral training programme for students at any institution to learn about working with collections.

Find out more:

collections.reading.ac.uk/whats-on/
#CFP: "The Ocean of Life. Humanities and the Ocean"
International seminar, 3 July 2026, University of the Ryukus, Japan.

Deadline for submissions: 19 December 2025

Info: international-seminar-ocean.my.canva.site

#envhum #envhist #ecolit #bluehumanities

Reposted by Dolly Jørgensen

As part of my Wikimedian in Residence position at the Manaaki Whenua-Landcare Research Group of the Bioeconomy Science Institute I've recently created documentation on linking publications to Natural History Collections in #Wikidata doi.org/10.5281/zeno...
Linking publications to collections : adding cites work, uses or acknowledged statements to Wikidata
This resource outlines simple workflows for adding “cites work”, “uses” and “acknowledges” statements to Wikidata items for publications. These statements link publications to natural history collecti...
doi.org

Have you read Moallem’s American Hippopotamus? magazine.atavist.com/2013/america...
Could be a publication like that.
American Hippopotamus - The Atavist Magazine
A bracing and eccentric epic of espionage and hippos.
magazine.atavist.com

I must know more about farming manatees whenever it is written up!
Are you an early-career environmental historian or interested in the challenges aspiring environmental historians face? Join our panel discussion with
@askehn.bsky.social @kathiescharf.bsky.social @tidetales.bsky.social and @wilkohardenberg.bsky.social et al., hosted by @eseh.bsky.social #envhist

Nice extinction history article.

Steller’s sea cows are one of my favorite extinction encounters in museums. I discuss them in chapter 8 on playful figures (examples from @mnhn.fr & Smithsonian NatHist) and chapter 1 on forms (example from @nathist.bsky.social )

press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/bo...

Reposted by Dolly Jørgensen

It's great to see so many signing up for the @asleuki.bsky.social Online Seminar on Eighteenth-Century Literature and Environment, on 29 Jan 2026, 3-7 pm GMT, but there's still room for more! Further details and registration information at: asle.org.uk/events/semin...

Reposted by Dolly Jørgensen

Reminder that books make awesome gifts for all holiday events, and they taste sweeter when they’re from indie bookstores. Don’t know what to get? Indie bookstores have gift cards!

In case you are curious to see more, November is #Nudivember so there are lots of drawings and pictures of nudibranches with that hashtag.
The RHS Plant Collector Archive is a unique collection of papers associated with the 12 plant collectors and their journeys. For the first time they are now fully catalogued, digitised, and free for everyone to access #skystorians #gardenhistory #nineteenthcentury
collections.rhs.org.uk/view/343871
RHS Plant Collector Archive - 19th century papers
collections.rhs.org.uk

Basically dreaming of my book Ghosts Behind Glass: Encountering Extinction in Museums
press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/bo...

Reposted by Dolly Jørgensen

CfP POLLEN26 - please join our panel, "Historicizing Geopolitical Ecologies of War" - see for more details and how to submit a proposal before 5th of December here; nomadit.co.uk/conference/p...

@casesofyou.bsky.social @pollenetwork.bsky.social @nicosananes.bsky.social
P066: Historicizing Geopolitical Ecologies of War
Standard Panel
nomadit.co.uk
Today is St Clement's Day, the patron saint of blacksmiths and metal workers.

At Finch Foundry in Devon, blacksmiths will gather to show their skills and complete in the annual snail race. Not what you might immediately think of, the race is to create an iron snail sculpture!

📷 Mel Peters

Reposted by Dolly Jørgensen

I’ve just launched Research Notes Studio, where I support researchers and organisations with editing, research development, and grant-writing.
If you’re preparing a manuscript or a proposal or know someone who is, please share www.researchnotesstudio.com

Reposted by Dolly Jørgensen

Highly recommended. Mine's just arrived. It is a good read and very friendly - with lots of excellent pix. Congratulations, @dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
and #ChicagoUP