Category Archives: Environmental Humanities

Ecomusicology and Serenading Different Kinds of Nature

A while back we talked about the video game Tiny Glades and how the artifice of the landscapes you could create there showed how ‘nature’ is not a faraway sequestered space free of any and all human interference. On the contrary, in our Anthropocene age every environment, every biome, and even every imaginable place on earth is directly or indirectly, largely or in part, shaped by human influence.1 And this makes the topic I selected for this week’s blog, discussing some songs about escaping to nature, also theoretically interesting.2 Because if nature is not an unequivocally uniform concept, can it even be a shared refuge where all those artists envision themselves going? And it does indeed turn out, that very distinct kinds of nature are serenaded in these songs. Moreover, there is a field we can turn to, if we want to explain these differences: ecomusicology. So let us today survey that field and those songs in order to find out what an escape to nature would actually mean in a world where forests are as much an environment shaped by humankind as your average suburb.

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Where Was Ancient Mesopotamia? The Case for Microecologies

That most people do not spend every waking hour contemplating the ultimate origins and regularly shifting meaning of everyday words – especially those of us who are not writing blogs for other’s infotainment – does not mean that this isn’t a very rewarding activity.1 Especially when it comes to area designations which are so ingrained that we hardly think about them, like the ancient Mediterranean or ancient Mesopotamia. Because it can be interesting to work out under which circumstances such large regions during such long eras can fruitfully be denoted with a single label and when this would obscure important subdivisions or local developments. For instance. if one studies people’s relationship to their immediate environment – be it ideologically, economically, or in any other conceivable way – it may be rewarding to break up familiar areas into what is called microecologies.2 And it is this useful methodological tool that I want to discuss with you today. Through this discussion we will also discover the ultimate origins of the label ‘Mesopotamia’ and encounter some of the conspicuous environmental differences within this region in ancient times.

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The Themes of My Favorite Video Games of 2024

After we discussed my twenty favorite albums of the previous calendar year last week, today I want to introduce you to three games that came out in 2024 and which may be of interest to the readers of this blog. Because the themes present in these products of digital entertainment harken back to subjects that we discussed on Bildungblocks in the past and provide, I hope, a new perspective on them. These are, in my opinion, also the best games of last year. As such, the following discussion doubles as a list with my favorite video games of 2024.

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Firewatch: We Always Take Ourselves With Us

Over the course of a human life, most of us will have experienced moments when we yearned to just flee our current problems and predicaments. Such a desire for escape often coincides with an inclination towards seclusion in a more natural environment. To leave our city, town, or hamlet for the open country and find the peace and quiet we are missing in nature, so to say.1 Both the attraction of such a flight and its ultimate futility have perhaps never been portrayed more authentically and bittersweet than in the narrative video game Firewatch.

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When Did the Anthropocene Begin?

In March 2024 a subcommittee of the International Union of Geological Sciences rejected a proposal to officially acknowledge the Anthropocene as an era of our geological history.1 This proposal was based on a specific research project that looked for the point where the growing impact of human activities on the global environment became visible throughout the geological record in certain ways.2 Such activities included creating radioactive materials and burning fossil fuels. If the results of this project, as they found their way into the proposal, had been accepted then the beginning of this new era would have been established around the midway point of the previous century, roughly coinciding with the advent of the so-called atomic age.3 This does not necessarily mean that we can now just ditch the idea of the Anthropocene altogether, though. There is arguably still a place for this term in science, scholarship, and our common parlance.4

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Searching for Ecological Attitudes in Ancient Stories

Last week, spring was in the air: the sun was shining, the birds where chirping, and the cars polluted the air.1 But only two of these observations will presumably enter most stories that feature this season. Except when one writes specifically about pollution, that is. Such as in the famous ‘Fable for Tomorrow’ that opens the 1962 book Silent Spring by Rachel Carson.2 And we might wonder whether it will be such specific works that shall survive and determine the reconstructed societal views on nature that will be attributed to our current day by the scholars of the future, when they are trying to glean these from our stories. Though, we do not need to wonder that much, as we ourselves struggle with similar questions regarding our own past.

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