In this creative piece, author Stephanie Kontopanos recounts a personal story about her connection to animals on campus and illustrates the profound relationship that can grow from sharing a habitat.
Read MoreWhy the lemon and not the lime? Author Nick Bucciarelli discusses the under appreciated lime and why it is superior to the lemon.
Read MoreWho can we thank for clean water in Evanston? That would be Charles J. Gilbert, the Father of Evanston Water Works. Grace Eder tells the compelling story behind the humble brick building just north of campus that provides the people of Evanston with safe drinking water year after year.
Read MoreWhat is the relationship between women and the natural world? Is there a connection between the exploitation and degradation of the environment and the subordination and oppression of women? In her fascinating article, Emma Belanger explores the intersections between gender and ecology, and what it means to be a female environmentalist today.
Read MoreThe animal tracks run parallel to the shore, up about a hundred feet, in between the dune-grasses of soft Carolina sand. I glance back. My own footprints leave vague blobs in the hot powder. No one would be able to distinguish my footprints as human, size 8 ½, female.
Read MoreWould humans be able to survive an environmental apocalypse? In her indelible piece Spoils, Katrina Holland projects us into a near future that is both all too familiar and beyond our imagining.
Read MoreWhat do meerkats, elephants, orang-utans and octopuses have in common? In Emma Belanger’s newest creative non-fiction piece, learn about what makes mothers - animal and human ones alike - so special, and why the maternal instinct is both so strong and universal.
Read MoreLife is often busy and has the tendency to pass by without us realizing it. Once in a while, it’s important to slow down, fully engage in the present moment, and become one with nature. What better way to do that than to read Emma’s debut poem “Becoming One?”
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