Kinship

Belonging in a World of Relations, Vol. 2 - Place

Azalik ez

Robin Wall Kimmerer, Gavin Van Horn, John Hausdoerffer: Kinship (2021, Center for Humans & Nature)

English hizkuntza

2021ko abe. 24a(e)an Center for Humans & Nature(e)n argitaratua.

ISBN:
978-1-7368625-7-5
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4 izar (2 berrikuspen)

4 edizio

(e)k Gavin Van Horn(r)en Kinship liburuaren kritika egin du

It's okay

3 izar

  • I didn't really like reading this book! It felt like I had to keep pushing myself to keep reading.
  • It's very focused on plant life and sometimes things like water. I would have liked more focus on connecting to the natural world from the streets.
  • The whiteness and white people speaking on behalf of BIPOC folx and their experiences is overwhelming.
  • I enjoyed Kyle Whyte, Trebbe Johnson, and Alison Hawthron Deming's chapters the most
  • I skipped three chapters (one in the beginning, middle, and end).
  • There's a lot of repetition and cross citing. I would have liked more cohesion and more community-oriented collaboration.
  • I liked the inclusion of poems as a break.

(e)k Robin Wall Kimmerer(r)en Planet liburuaren kritika egin du (Kinship: Belonging In A World Of Relations, #1)

Water, Moon, Mountain

4 izar

Planet is the first of a 5-volume curated collection of essays and poems about kinship released by the Centre for Humans and Nature. As with many collections, it features a variety of writing, some strong and some not. The first volume is on "planet" and combines thoughts on this pale blue dot from thinkers, writers, artists, poets and philosophers.

Overall, the writing is of a very high standard and the collection is well presented. Standout essays include Andrew S. Yang's Kinshape, which is a conversetion with stardust as kin, via his mother. Co-editor Robin Wall Kimmerer's part-speculative fiction about humans being invited back into the family by other creatures that share this space is thoughtful and wonderful. Ceridwen Dovey's essay on giving rights to the moon raises fascinating questions and is written with a beautiful sense of care. However some of the essays fail to land, particularly the "celebrity" …

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