Tag Archives: John Muir

Ice Thoughts: 2,

Study in Ice, Rock and Water. Southern Greenland seen from 36000 feet. Photo © Susan Oliver. Like the white ghost of a glacier the mists advance, riding over phalanxes of tamarack, sliding across bog meadows heavy with dew. A single silence … Continue reading

Posted in American West, Arctic, Art, Birds and Animals, Ecology, environmental aesthetics, Ice, land ethics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Getting to the Roots of the Matter: Trees and the Environmental Imagination in 19th Century Literature.

A video recording of my lecture in Interdisciplinary Explorations: The Idea of Nature Public Lecture Series at Boise State University, Idaho is now available at Boise Scholarworks. Thanks to the sponsors for their generosity in making the series possible, to … Continue reading

Posted in Ecology, Environment and walking, Fiction, Poetry and Essays, Trees | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Of Rocks and Hard Places . . .

I was talking with my group of graduate students about John Muir’s essays originally written for newspapers, published in the collection Travels in Alaska (1915). Muir developed a hypothesis during the 1870s revising accounts of how the geological landscape of … Continue reading

Posted in Environment and walking, Poetry and Essays, Trees | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment