I served as editor of you are here: the journal of creative geography for three years from 2020 - 2023. yah is a transdiciplinary and multigenre journal exploring the intersections of geographic thought, the arts, and arts practices. The journal has been around since 1998 and is housed in the School of Geography, Development, and Environment at the University of Arizona. The journal website, which contained an archive of the issues was hacked, but you can read the last three issues and order print copies.
queer ecologies: an editorial introduction in queer ecologies, you are here: the journal of creative geography.
forward: in search of a queer ecology in queer ecologies, you are here: the journal of creative geography.
bodies & politics: an editorial introduction with Emma Lawlor in bodies & politics, you are here: the journal of creative geography.
I've also contributed to the academic literature on creative geographies.
>> Read my short article "Experimenting with creative geographic methods in the Critical Futures Visual Archive."
>> Read "At the limits of critical geography: Creative interventions into the exclusionary spaces of U.S. geography."
montaged 35mm slides from geography archives
published in countercartographies, you are here: the journal of creative geography, 2023.
exhibited at Union Hall Gallery, Denver in Against Nature, 2023
natural history
installation and portraits
published in queer ecologies, you are here: the journal of creative geography, 2022.
exhibited at Union Hall Gallery, Denver in Against Nature, 2023
multimedia sculpture
exhibited at: Toward decolonial feminisms: A conference inspired by the work of María Lugones, Pennsylvania State University, May, 2018.
the military-geography complex: a study in form
exhibited at: The Critical Futures Visual Archive. Pennsylvania State University, Oct. 2017
The Critical Futures Visual Archive is a collection of critical creative geographic works I curated in 2017. You can learn more about the exhibit through my writing: On the methodological potential of creative work in geography, see Experimenting with creative geographic methods in The Critical Futures Visual Archive. On the institutional and disciplinary barriers to incorporating creative works into geography, see: At the limits of critical geography: Creative interventions into the exclusionary spaces of U.S. geography (2019).
The Critical Futures/Visual Archive explores the intersection of geographic knowledge, visual representation, and creative expression as a site for critical thought, knowledge production, and practice in our hallways and beyond.
The archive experiments with alternative modes of geographic thought, experience, and representation, engaging themes of militarization, gentrification, race, place, identity, diaspora, violence, gender, social (in)justice, memory, representation, landscape, borders, and space.
Through various media and methods, contributing artists have posed reflections and launched critiques, crafted experiments and weaved narratives, documented the past and reimagined the future of geographic knowledge and scholarly practice.
We invite you to join us in the task of crafting a critical archive that might yet give shape to our collective futures, to contribute to a generative and engaged scholarly practice committed to questioning convention, upsetting boundaries, and insisting on the transformative potential of intellectual debate and creative expression.
Use right and left arrows to scroll through gallery.