11. November 2025

New Publication by Zeynep Y. Gökçe and Jennifer Leetsch Volume 24 of the DSS Series is out now: New Publication by Zeynep Y. Gökçe and Jennifer Leetsch

On "Ecological Interdependencies: Strong Asymmetrical Relations and More-than-Human Worlds"

Congratulations to BCDSS PhD Researcher Zeynep Y. Gökçe and Junior Professor and BCDSS Alumna Jennifer Leetsch, editors of the new publication Ecological Interdependencies: Strong Asymmetrical Relations and More-than-Human Worlds in our DSS Series with De Gruyter.

New Publication in DSS Series
New Publication in DSS Series © BCDSS
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About this book:

This volume interrogates the environmental humanities through the lens of asymmetrical dependencies: it is interested in investigating the relationship between the environment and asymmetrical power dynamics, an approach that sheds light on how historical and contemporary inequalities have shaped and still shape our social, political and cultural realities as they intersect with their respective ecosystems. In an attempt to bridge disciplines, the volume synthesizes diverse perspectives from the humanities and social sciences – anthropology, art history, cultural studies, archaeology, religious studies, political science, and literary studies –, attending to the tangled and often thorny relationships that form human and more-than-human existence. By incorporating ecological viewpoints and recognizing the agency of non-human actors, the book aims to amplify the often-overlooked voices of the marginalized, including those beyond the human realm. Understanding the intersections of power dynamics and human history requires acknowledging our deeply interconnected existence within a broader planetary context and this edited volume’s contributions offer a lens through which to rethink enduring questions of difference and dependency. These considerations are framed not as abstract or theoretical exercises but as deeply grounded in material realities shaped by histories of asymmetry, inequality and exploitation, thus challenging us to critically reframe notions of ecological inter/dependencies beyond the universalizing narratives of the Anthropocene.

 

With contributions by: 

Zeynep Y. Gökçe and Jennifer Leetsch - "Thinking About Ecological Inter/Dependencies: Introductory Remarks"

Paul Graf - "Landscape Modification as Domination: Pre-Hispanic Human-Environment Relationships in the Southern Maya Lowlands"

Kristina Großmann and Ajarani Mangkujati Djandam - "Reconfigurations of Asymmetries in Mining in Indonesia"

Alexander Rothenberg - "Asymmetrical Dependencies and Factory Farming: Externalizing Violence"

Julia A. B. Hegewald - "Ecological Dependencies and Resource- and Climate-Responsive Jaina Shrines Along the Malabar Coast in South India"

Stefan Feuser - "Triumph over Nature? Ecological Dependencies and Landscape Modifications in Mediterranean Port Cities"

Dita Auziņa - "Networks of Human and Other-Than-Human Dependencies During Environmental Catastrophes: Kukra Hill, Nicaragua"

Taynã Tagliati - "Embodying Worlds: More-Than-Human Interactions Between the Xingu and the Rhine"

Lewis Doney - "Asymmetrical Relations with Other-Than-Human Beings in Some Accounts of Early Travel to Tibet"

David B. Smith - "More-Than-Human Creation and Ecological (Inter)Dependencies in the Early Medieval Irish and Anglo-Saxon Penitentials"

Alissa Kautz - “'This Minuscule Orb': The Material Agency of Opium Poppies in Amitav Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies"

 

You can read and download the book here.

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