Gavin Van Horn is the Creative Director and Executive Editor for the Center for Humans and Nature. His writing is tangled up in the ongoing conversation between humans, our nonhuman kin, and the animate landscape. He is the co-editor (with John Hausdoerffer) of Wildness: Relations of People and Place, and (with Dave Aftandilian) City Creatures: Animal Encounters in the Chicago Wilderness, and the author of The Way of Coyote: Shared Journeys in the Urban Wilds. If he’s not up a tree or in a kayak, you can find Gavin slow-walking the footpaths, beaches, and forests of the Chicagoland area.
Dr. Robin Wall Kimmerer is a mother, botanist, writer and Distinguished Teaching Professor at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse, New York and the founding Director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment. She is an enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation and a student of the plant nations. Her writings include Gathering Moss and Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants. As a writer and a scientist, her interests include not only restoration of ecological communities, but restoration of our relationships to land. She lives on an old farm in upstate New York, tending gardens domestic and wild.
John Hausdoerffer is author of Catlin’s Lament: Indians, Manifest Destiny, and the Ethics of Nature as well as co-author and co-editor of Wildness: Relations of People and Place and What Kind of Ancestor Do You Want to Be? John is the Dean of the School of Environment & Sustainability at Western Colorado University and co-founder of Coldharbour Institute, the Center for Mountain Transitions, and the Resilience Studies Consortium. John serves as a Fellow and Senior Scholar for the Center for Humans and Nature.
“This collection is a passionate call to turn towards the living
Earth with reverence and respect, and in so doing to cultivate new
and old forms of curiosity, of understanding, and of
responsibility. Across five captivating volumes, Kinship: Belonging
in a World of Relations brings together a rich diversity of voices
and perspectives. Contributions range in form from poetry to
interviews and essays, drawing on and engaging with the insights of
Indigenous stories, philosophy, the natural sciences, and much
more. Ultimately, this is a collection that does much more than
simply describe the webs of relationship that are our world of kin.
At the same time, it invites and at times pulls the reader into a
sense of the fundamental sharedness of all life and our profound
obligations, perhaps now more than ever, to hold open room for
others to be and to become in their own unique and precious
ways.”—Thom van Dooren, author of The Wake of Crows: Living and
Dying in Shared Worlds
“Essential reading about the question of our time: how to
belong. A chorus of beautiful, wise, grieving, exulting, and
generative voices, guiding us into true ‘family values’ for a wild
living Earth. These collections offer rare and rich insight into
how to find, honor, and heal the bonds of blood, place, time, and
ethics that knit us to all other beings.”—David George Haskell,
author of The Forest Unseen and The Songs of Trees
"Sometimes when we are working with a document, when it’s growing
and changing, we call it “live.” Likewise, this book is live. It’s
full of life. It’s living inside you as you read it and you are
living inside it. It’s changing you and you’re changing it. May
this book be a living document that guides us toward love and care
for all kin."—Janisse Ray, author of Wild Spectacle
"The Kinship series of books is an ensemble of outstanding essays
that reveal the truth that reality is rooted in relationships.
After reading these marvellous essays, it becomes crystal clear
that there is no reality outside relationships. These books shatter
the old story of separation between humans and Nature and explode
the belief that nature is a machine and the planet Earth is a dead
rock. Here is the new story of the living Earth and a celebration
of deep connectivity of life; human as well as more-than-human
life. These are inspiring and enlightening essays. They will change
your perception of Nature. I recommend these books
wholeheartedly!"—Satish Kumar, Founder, Schumacher
College, Editor Emeritus, Resurgence & Ecologist
“What a joyful series this is, this family of books, crafted with
love, clarity, and compassion by a family of poets, scholars, and
sages. Together the volumes form a five-part harmony, converging
beautifully around notions of kinship and kinning. The authors ask,
how do we rightly relate? How may we learn to live well with our
kin? Can we listen with sensitivity to the voices and languages of
others, the beings with fur, claws, wings, scales, and fins with
whom we share the mountains, rivers, seas, grasslands, and forests,
places that ring with spirit and meaning, too, who are family, too?
The chapters are stories as much as studies, narratives born from
experience, wisdom, and observations over many generations. I can’t
wait to share this family with my students and colleagues in
conservation and anthropology, and with my friends and kin
everywhere.“—Dr. Amanda Stronza, Anthropologist and Professor of
Ecology and Conservation Biology, Texas A&M University
“Kinship is essential reading. Five books of elemental grace and
charm, beginning with a spider's web. Each strand glistens in the
sunlight, dreaming, catch and release, a journey through the
multiverse. Each gathering of words, a page, a tribe, a story of
who we are, who we have been, and who we've yet to become, shiny,
bright, new, and very old. The DNA of rock and stone, of all our
relations, the chemistry of breathing, letting go, and Love. Again,
again, and again.”—John Francis, PhD, author of Planetwalker: 17
Years of Silence, 22 Years of Walking
“At a time when divisive politics and human-first ideologies
dominate public discourse, Kinship provides a deeply-moving,
soul-rejuvenating, and course-correcting primer for recognizing and
building relationships among all living things. Here readers will
find solace in essays and poems about what we’re losing, as well as
inspiration for how to live well with other humans—and with our
other-than-human kin. But Kinship is more than instructive. Taken
together, these exquisite volumes are a balm for the soul.”—Dr. Amy
Brady, Executive Director of Orion magazine
"Kinship is the type of series I would want to gift to my wild,
untamed, and unschooled children, for from its pages springs an
education at the end of homogenous time, a crack in the tarmac of
ascension, an insurgency of the hitherto invisible. At a time when
the human is no longer tenable as a category unto itself, we will
need the prophetic voices of these poets, philosophers, mothers,
fathers, scientists, thinkers, public intellectuals, artists, and
awestruck fugitives to kindle a politics of humility, to help us
fall down to earth from our gilded perches, to help us stray from
the threatening familiarity of our own image. It is time to meet
the others we imagined we left behind: this constellation of stars
will guide us."—Bayo Akomolafe, Ph.D., author of These Wilds Beyond
our Fences: Letters to My Daughter on Humanity’s Search for
Home
“The Kinship series upends colonial paradigms around humans and our
relationship with more-than-human nature. These paradigms have
driven mainstream environmental movements to engage in myopic
efforts that at times have exacerbated ecological imbalances.
Through stories, essays, art, poetry, and more, contributors chip
away at the layers that bind our collective colonial ethos. Rather
than owning nature, we are urged to think about our kinship with
all that is nonhuman. Rather than controlling our environments
using methods rooted in human exceptionalism (i.e., we know best),
we are urged to learn from our kin. Rather than “using” land,
water, and wildlife as “natural resources,” we are urged to be in
reciprocity and right relationship with our kin. Rather than
labeling birds, rocks, and rivers as “it,” we are urged to think of
them as persons who have their own rights. Rather than being
static, we are urged to be kinetic (Kin-etic?). Decolonization
begins with unlearning, and this is a good place to begin.”—Aparna
Rajagopal (she/her), founding partner of the Avarna Group and
cofounder of PGM ONE Summit
"The wonderful essays gathered here will stir minds and open hearts
with the reminder that kinship is about how all things are
connected, and that these relationships are best when acknowledged,
attended to, and above all, savored."—Florence Williams, author of
The Nature Fix: How Being in Nature Makes us Happier, Healthier,
and More Creative
"A powerful, multidimensional work of extraordinary vision and
reach whose overarching theme of humans sharing encounters with our
other-than-human relations presaged a project out of the
ordinary."—Resilience
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