The Everglades have lasted for about 5000 years. They are called Nature by some because that is what those people are used to. But beyond this, they are a hyperobject, massively distributed in time and space in ways that baffle humans and make interacting with them fascinating, disturbing, problematic and wondrous.
A simple one minute movie of some of my travels around them is sitting in iMovie right now—I'll see if I can clean it up and upload it here.
Joel Trexler, whose views I share in the first sentence, is an ecologist who's totally at home out on the Everglades. The way he scooped up a carnivorous plant, Bladderwort. His excitement about the Gar, the living fossil. So many things that were hard to photograph but compelling to think about.
As opposed to Natural, Joel prefers “historical.” Just like Adorno and me...
2 comments:
No, the Everglades are not a hyperobject. You do not seem to understand what that word means. I recommend you either stop using it, or visit Wikipedia.
Desmon, you must mean this page.
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