Intertwined Histories

Plants in Their Social Contexts

Edited by Jim Ellis
Series: Calgary Institute for the Humanities
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781773850900, 120 pages, May 2019

Table of contents

 

Acknowledgements

Introduction
Jim Ellis

The Nature of Plants: How Different Scientific Perspectives Shape Our Understanding of What Plants Are
James F. Cahill Jr, Megan K. Ljubotina, and Habba F. Mahal

Phytognosis: Learning from Plants
Patricia Vieira

Historia Plantarum: From Persephone's Abecedarium
Erina Harris

Periculum: Artist's Statement and Portfolio
Jennifer Wanner

Spectral Garden: Artist's Statement and Portfolio
Laura St. Pierre

Mike Macdonald's Butterfly Garden: The Little Garden that Could
Katherine Ylitalo

An Ancient Partnership: Prairie Grass, Bison, and First Nations
Wes Olson

Big Stone
M. N. Hutchinson

Gone Today, Here Tomorrow: An Interview with MIa Rushton and Eric Moschopedis
Ciara McKeown

The City of Calgary's Urban Forest: Past, Present, and Future
Nikki Anguish

Make the Waste Places Fruitful Gardens: The Calgary Vacant Lots Garden Club, 1914-1952
Andrew S. Mathews

Leila Sujir's Forest of Pixels
Nancy Tousley

 

Description

How do we understand the boundaries of individual creatures?

What are the systems of interdependency that bind all living creatures together?

Plants were amoung the the first to colonize the planet. They created the soil and the atmosphere that made life possible for animals. They are some of the largest and oldest life forms on Earth. In spite of their primacy, Western cultures have traditionally regarded plants as the lowest life forms, lacking mobility, sensation, and communication. But recent research argues that plants move and respond to their environment, communicate with each other, and form partnerships with other species.

Art, poetry, and essays by cultural anthropologists, experimental plant biologists, philosophers, botanists and foresters expose the complex interactions of the vibrant living world around us and give us a lens through which we can explore our intertwined histories.