📜 Bibliography: Brown, M. (2023). UK houseplant statistics. The Horticulture Magazine horticulture.co.uk/houseplants/statistics/ Carabelli, G. (2020). House plants were our link with nature in lockdown - now they could change how we relate to the natural world. The Conversation theconversation.com/house-plants-were-our-link-with-nature-in-lockdown-now-they-could-change-how-we-relate-to-the-natural-world-147637 Hernández, K., Rubis, J. M., Theriault, N., Todd, Z., Mitchell, A., Country, B., Burarrwanga, L., Ganambarr, R., Ganambarr-Stubbs, M., Ganambarr, B., Maymuru, D., Suchet-Pearson, S., Lloyd, K., & Wright, S. (2021). The Creatures Collective: Manifestings. Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space, 4(3), 838-863. Lawrence, A. M. (2022). Listening to plants: Conversations between critical plant studies and vegetal geography. Progress in Human Geography, 46(2), 629-651. McLachlan, A. (2022). Botanical Kinships: A tangled taxonomy. www.anthrotheory.net/reading-lists/botanical-kinships-mclachlan/ Myers N (2014). Sensing Botanical Sensoria: A Kriya for Cultivating Your Inner Plant. Centre for Imaginative Ethnography. imaginative- ethnography.com/imaginings/affect/sensing-botanical- sensoria/ ------------- (2015). Conversations on plant sensing. Notes from the field. NatureCulture 3, 35-56. ------------- (2017a). Becoming sensor in sentient worlds: a more-than-natural history of a black Oak Savannah. In: Bakke G and Peterson M (eds) Between Matter and Method: Encounters in Anthropology and Art. London: Bloomsbury Press, 73-96. ------------- (2017b). Protocols for an ungrid-able ecology: kinesthetic attunements for a more-than-natural his- tory of a Black Oak Savannah. In Hiebert T (ed), Naturally Postnatural. Victoria: Noxious Sector Press, 105-125. ------------ (2019). From Edenic Apocalypse to Gardens against Eden: Plants and People in and after the Anthropocene. In Hetheringdon, K. (ed.) Infrastructure, Environment, and Life in the Anthropocene. Duke University Press. ------------ (2020). How to grow liveable worlds: Ten (not-so-easy) steps for life in the Planthroposcene. ABC www.abc.net.au/religion/natasha-myers-how-to-grow-liveable-worlds:-ten-not-so-easy-step/11906548 Shir-Wise, M. (2022). Melting time and confined leisure under COVID-19 lockdown. World Leisure Journal, 64(3), 221-233. Subramaniam, B. (2001). The aliens have landed! Reflections on the rhetoric of biological invasions. Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism, 2(1), 26-40. Sundberg, M., Antlfinger, A.E., Ellstrand, N.C., Mickle, J.E., Douglas, A.W. & Darnowski, D.W. (2002). Plant blindness: we have met the enemy and he is us. Plant Sci. Bull, 48, 78-84.
What a beautiful film! It gave me a new appreciation for the role that plants play in lives.
what a stunning illustration
📜 Bibliography:
Brown, M. (2023). UK houseplant statistics. The Horticulture Magazine horticulture.co.uk/houseplants/statistics/
Carabelli, G. (2020). House plants were our link with nature in lockdown - now they could change how we relate to the natural world. The Conversation
theconversation.com/house-plants-were-our-link-with-nature-in-lockdown-now-they-could-change-how-we-relate-to-the-natural-world-147637
Hernández, K., Rubis, J. M., Theriault, N., Todd, Z., Mitchell, A., Country, B., Burarrwanga, L., Ganambarr, R., Ganambarr-Stubbs, M., Ganambarr, B., Maymuru, D., Suchet-Pearson, S., Lloyd, K., & Wright, S. (2021). The Creatures Collective: Manifestings. Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space, 4(3), 838-863.
Lawrence, A. M. (2022). Listening to plants: Conversations between critical plant studies and vegetal geography. Progress in Human Geography, 46(2), 629-651.
McLachlan, A. (2022). Botanical Kinships: A tangled taxonomy.
www.anthrotheory.net/reading-lists/botanical-kinships-mclachlan/
Myers N (2014). Sensing Botanical Sensoria: A Kriya for Cultivating Your Inner Plant. Centre for Imaginative Ethnography.
imaginative- ethnography.com/imaginings/affect/sensing-botanical- sensoria/
------------- (2015). Conversations on plant sensing. Notes from the field. NatureCulture 3, 35-56.
------------- (2017a). Becoming sensor in sentient worlds: a more-than-natural history of a black Oak Savannah. In: Bakke G and Peterson M (eds) Between Matter and Method: Encounters in Anthropology and Art. London: Bloomsbury Press, 73-96.
------------- (2017b). Protocols for an ungrid-able ecology: kinesthetic attunements for a more-than-natural his- tory of a Black Oak Savannah. In Hiebert T (ed), Naturally Postnatural. Victoria: Noxious Sector Press, 105-125.
------------ (2019). From Edenic Apocalypse to Gardens against Eden: Plants and People in and after the Anthropocene. In Hetheringdon, K. (ed.) Infrastructure, Environment, and Life in the Anthropocene. Duke University Press.
------------ (2020). How to grow liveable worlds: Ten (not-so-easy) steps for life in the Planthroposcene. ABC www.abc.net.au/religion/natasha-myers-how-to-grow-liveable-worlds:-ten-not-so-easy-step/11906548
Shir-Wise, M. (2022). Melting time and confined leisure under COVID-19 lockdown. World Leisure Journal, 64(3), 221-233.
Subramaniam, B. (2001). The aliens have landed! Reflections on the rhetoric of biological invasions. Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism, 2(1), 26-40.
Sundberg, M., Antlfinger, A.E., Ellstrand, N.C., Mickle, J.E., Douglas, A.W. & Darnowski, D.W. (2002). Plant blindness: we have met the enemy and he is us. Plant Sci. Bull, 48, 78-84.
A wonderful video about important work.
Thank you!!