<p>Noah Dennison is a doctoral student and environmental anthropologist at The Ohio State University. His previous research examined the relationships between declining canopy kelp populations, urbanization, industrial development, and conservation culture throughout the region surrounding the Salish Sea, in northwest Washington. Noah's current research takes place in the coalfields of southern West Virginia, where identity, belonging, meaning, and affect are constructed and entangled within landscapes which have been heavily degraded by extractive industry. </p>
Dennison, N. R.,
(2025) “Review of Esther Sánchez-Pardo & María Porras Sánchez (eds.). 2024. Myth and environmentalism: Arts of resilience for a damaged planet”,
Journal of Political Ecology 32(1).
doi: https://doi.org/10.2458/jpe.7109
Dennison,
N.
(2025) 'Review of Esther Sánchez-Pardo & María Porras Sánchez (eds.). 2024. Myth and environmentalism: Arts of resilience for a damaged planet',
Journal of Political Ecology.
32(1)
doi: 10.2458/jpe.7109
Dennison,
N.
Review of Esther Sánchez-Pardo & María Porras Sánchez (eds.). 2024. Myth and environmentalism: Arts of resilience for a damaged planet. Journal of Political Ecology. 2025 9;
32(1)
doi: 10.2458/jpe.7109
Dennison,
N.
(2025, 9 13). Review of Esther Sánchez-Pardo & María Porras Sánchez (eds.). 2024. Myth and environmentalism: Arts of resilience for a damaged planet.
Journal of Political Ecology
32(1)
doi: 10.2458/jpe.7109