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  • May 25, 2020

    Texas Herping: May 23 & 25, 2020

    Texas Herping: May 23 & 25, 2020

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  • May 10, 2020

    UNCC Oral History Interview

    Casey Moore (UNCC Oral History Assistant) interviewed me for the University of North Carolina at Charlotte Oral History Archives. The interview covers my experiences of the April 30, 2019 campus shooting that occurred in my classroom.

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  • May 4, 2020

    Texas Herping: May 2 & 4, 2020

    Texas Herping: May 2 & 4, 2020

    Dr. Sarah Pollock and I braved the scorching heat (>95F) to look for snakes around little water around Culebra Creek Park. Special Guests: Lots of ribbons snakes and gulf coast toads.

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  • May 1, 2020

    A Discussion of Multispecies Love and Arts of Noticing

    A Discussion of Multispecies Love and Arts of Noticing

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  • April 27, 2020

    Revisiting the Past: Some Thoughts on the UNCC Shooting

    Revisiting the Past: Some Thoughts on the UNCC Shooting

    Today is April 27, 2020. April 30 will mark one year since a gunman walked into my LBST 2213 class on the last day of the semester. I’ve written about the experience and ideas and insights in the subsequent months and was featured in an article in The Chronicle of Higher Education. This last year

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  • March 16, 2020

    Big Bend: Narratives of Isolation

    Big Bend: Narratives of Isolation

    “Splendid Isolation, the Big Bend…” is how the National Parks Services introduces Big Bend National Park on its website. My partner and I recently took a several day trip to Big Bend and, I have to say, it was truly splendid. Many of the sights and experiences I had were unlike anything I had experienced

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  • February 15, 2020

    Becoming Inia and Dolphin

    Becoming Inia and Dolphin

    The Amazon River Basin is one of the richest river systems in the world, covering more than 7-million square kilometers. This system contains more than 5600 species of fish and is home to large predators such as caiman, giant otters, and arapaima. Many of the species that occupy the Amazon River and its tributaries are

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  • February 15, 2020

    AES 2020 Abstract: Mediating Multispecies Relations Through Western and Indigenous Conservation

    AES 2020 Abstract: Mediating Multispecies Relations Through Western and Indigenous Conservation

    Western notions of modernity have situated human society apart from nature, which encompasses those spaces and beings that are unmodified and unsullied by human activity. The Western conception of nature/society can be contrasted with that of the Cofán—an Indigenous people of Amazonian Ecuador and Colombia—who identify as tsampini can’jen’sundeccu (dwellers of the forest). The Cofán

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  • November 5, 2019

    Nov 5, 2019 Interview with Chris and Cara of Sausage of Science

    Nov 5, 2019 Interview with Chris and Cara of Sausage of Science

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  • September 1, 2019

    The Liminality of Grief in Trauma

    The Liminality of Grief in Trauma

    As time continues to press forward after the April 30 shooting at UNCC, I have continued to reflect, think about my experience, and discuss the experiences with others who were there and beyond. The summer is over, and I am required to be around people more frequently. I am in a new city, meeting new

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