2025 | Issue #7

We read the news about torrential rain in some distant place, separated from it by our screens. We add a grating of fresh nutmeg to our food, in ignorance of the spice’s cultural history. We walk along a riverbank and see water, little water, only to find that there used to be more. The seventh issue of Springs ponders on emplacement and visibility, takes us through the centuries, and echoes an urgent call to attend to nonhuman sentience. Catherine Bush walks the streets of Venice, seeking art that engages with Rachel Carson at the Biennale Arte 2024. In “The Unbearable Weight of Displaced Weather,” Mike Hulme looks at sociotechnical developments that have changed the climate and the way we experience the weather. Amitav Ghosh takes us to the Banda Islands to unravel “The Nutmeg’s Curse.” “Walking a Sicilian River” by Paolo Gruppuso and Erika Garozzo ruminates on the life of Sicily’s largest but now disappearing river—the Simeto. Processing the horrid February 2025 “Killing [of] a Baboon” by a group of schoolchildren in South Africa, Sandra Swart looks back at history and examines the role of superstition and the occult in the ongoing violence against these primates. In the final contribution, Mascha Gugganig and Judith Bopp discuss “Organic Farming in Thailand” and prevailing narratives about agriculture.

Rain, Carson, Art, Salt: A Venetian Matrix

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22 minutes

Early September 2024: When, on the morning of my third day in Venice, I wake and grab my phone to check the weather app, I am met by the same orange b...

The Unbearable Weight of Displaced Weather

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11 minutes

Through apps, webcams, and other forms of digital mediation, the weather is always with us. Yet, more significantly, it is not just “our” weather that...
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2024 | Issue #6

The sixth issue of Springs meditates on questions of heritage, place, and responsibility. How many generations does it take to make a meal? How do we show we care—for humans and for nonhumans alike? When we look up, is it a starry night or a sea of fog? At home in Utah, Christopher Cokinos reflects upon a life of lunar research and encourages us to ponder the Moon’s role in our lives, histories, and futures. From the Middle East to the Balkans, Sevgi Mutlu Sirakova explores the diverse history of tarhana’s microbial cultures and distinct culinary flavors while foregrounding its importance to a sustainable future of food. When Stephen Milder talks about a German advertising slogan, he reveals how today’s perception of environmental problems differs from the 1960s. In the Azorean town of Furnas, L. Sasha Gora guides us through a place where the fumaroles simmer an ancient stew, and she asks us to consider the relationship between environments, ingredients, and energy.  As she looks at human attachment to individual companion species, Kieko Matteson pens her discord with birds in captivity and considers what could take the place of cages. To better understand work in and on heat in the age of climate change, Daniel Dumas sits down with Elspeth Oppermann to discuss her novel, and personal, approach to the field.

The Place of the Moon

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15 minutes

The same Moon rises everywhere, but, for me, the Moon is part of the US West. It rose over my first house near Logan, Utah; three houses in Tucson, Ar...

Cultures of Tarhana: A Tale of Humans and Microbes

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18 minutes

The cultures of tarhana—a fermented instant soup base—come with a long-practiced culinary tradition in the Middle East and the Balkans. Although often...
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2024 | Issue #5

The fifth issue of Springs is an odyssey from the cold depths of a northern German lake to the warm dunes of southern Portugal. Jessica Lee travels to the German village of Neuglobsow to uncover a region shaped by the intangible legends of ferocious red roosters as well as by the tangible impact of a nearby nuclear power plant. A new, re-enchanting vocabulary for the misunderstood kingdom of fungi, giving an organism “agency” through language, is, as Alison Pouliot contends, the first step toward a more mainstream recognition. When RCC Director Christof Mauch sits down with Martin Saxer, it is to discuss what makes the spatially unconfined practice of contemporary foraging different from the that of hunter–gatherers. Anthropologist Emmanuelle Roth and historian Gregg Mitman follow a local park ranger through the Nimba mountain range to investigate how the region’s complex history has altered relations among its living and nonliving occupants. Along the shoreline of a small beaver pond in Maine, writer and historian Beth LaDow regales us with a story of the quirky relationship between humans and beavers and gives us a glimpse into the everyday life of the wetlands they create. Joana Gaspar de Freitas reckons with her self-professed transitory muses: sand dunes. Among the shifting slopes of southern Portugal’s human-shaped shoreline, the product of a decades-long beach nourishment project, Joana’s personal history and her professional research collide.

The Magic Mirror: Legends, Limnology, and Nuclear Power on Lake Stechlin

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15 minutes

On the horizon of the small German village of Neuglobsow, the chimney of the Rheinsberg nuclear power plant rises above the surrounding beech and pine...

Talking Fungus: Finding Language for a Troubled Kingdom

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10 minutes

Language greatly colours the way we perceive life. Words and concepts shape our perception of nature, and not all organisms receive equal consideratio...
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2023 | Issue #4

The fourth issue of Springs leads us across four continents, from the streets of downtown Los Angeles to the Ecuadorian Amazon, into the woodlands of southwest Nigeria, and along Ukraine’s Dnipro river. Frank Zelko yanks the root causes of tooth loss in industrial societies from the long history of dental ecology. Jens Kersten implores the democratic states of the Global North to transform their constitutional orders and embrace their responsibility for planetary health. As we digest the marvelous images of Amelia Fiske and Jonas Fischer’s “Crude Encounters,” we are asked to consider the ecological and psychological impacts of oil extraction. Brady Fauth sits down with Francesca Mezzenzana to discuss her research into children’s human–nonhuman relationships. Joseph Adedeji encourages us to experience the power of built heritage as a symbol of hope for a harmonious coexistence of society and the nonhuman world. Irus Braverman’s “Mother Drone, Mother Nature” holds under the microscope the ongoing convergences in technological innovation, nature conservation, and the Israeli military. Jenny Price pulls us through the looking glass, into the unique world of mockstitutions. The Dnipro river, a major focus of Soviet industrialization, is the subject of Paul Josephson’s “Rivers as Battlefields.” Serenella Iovino writes about Italo Calvino’s The Baron in the Trees and uncovers the author’s unique political ecology.

In the Teeth of History: Dental Decay in the Longue Durée

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27 minutes

In recent years, I have been writing a book on the history of water fluoridation, a practice that is dental dogma in a handful of countries, particula...

Ecological Constitutionalism: A Necessity

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14 minutes

It is no longer a new idea to state that we are living in the Anthropocene—an era in which humanity has become a force of nature. But when we look mor...
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