The Journal of Wild Culture
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T. S. Eliot said poetry of the past evolves as new generations of readers consume it. Looking around, how is the landscape—and our perceptions of it—shifting with time? By Ken Worpole and Jason Orton.
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A new show at the National Gallery in London, Australian Impressionists, shows us what we've been missing. By Marilyn Mercer.
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When there's no answer to this question, it must be love. Prose and poems about intimacy with time in place, place in time. By Sean Prentiss.
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Rick/Simon started out in the graphics trade by tweaking his grandmother's greeting cards, and never looked back. By Whitney Smith.
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In the war against wild animal poaching, a photographer clicked on a successful solution. Interview with Margot Raggett.
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A young painter's peripatetic journey. By Whitney Smith.
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Somewhere out back there is someone thinking about me. Prose and poems about the wild lives of others. By John Hicks.
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How an artist's eloquent grief charges memory of a departed loved one. By Whitney Smith.
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Touching, and being touched, by our planet's welcoming skin. By Amber Massie-Blomfield.
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The tug between self interest and the commonweal. Fred Fiske's mother's test tells us about ourselves.
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In the Asian regions a sophisticated sharing of knowledge is helping preserve big cats. By Stephanie V. Sears.
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The Parkland uprisings . . . and debugging the code in the education, democracy and mass violence debate. By Henry Giroux.
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