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Showing posts with the label interviews

In Orion Magazine

In 2007 someone nicked my phrase "dark ecology" and started a movement with an essay in Orion . Now I'm there in a short interview mostly about Being Ecological .

Here's an Interview

...for Springerin , a German magazine (this is a translation). I think it's nice...

Barcelona Interview (in Spanish)

This is from a few months ago , but a smart person found the link!

Tim Answers an Email

Boy oh boy I answered it about nine months late! I'm so busy... Anyway I thought you might like these brief answers. Questions are as they appear in the email: 1, In relation to OOO what connections do you think there are with the new ideas that we are now in an Anthropocene Epoch? Well, we are aware of gigantic entities whose data is obviously different from what they are, which is the basic OOO insight. Things don’t coincide with thing data. It’s just that the hyperobjects (such as climate, biosphere…) are big enough for us to be able to know this intuitively. 2, What is your thinking on land fill ? and how in your opinion does that contribute to this environmental change? Not much! I haven’t yet. That doesn’t mean I shouldn’t in future. 3, What is your opinion on humans having  a greater connection with materialistic object around them, than they now have with the earth that supports them? Unfortunately there are some ecological phenomenological chemicals within consumerism. Eco...

Morton on Buddhism (interview)

This was such an honor an really fun to do for Lion's Roar . Take home line: Buddhism is not about suffering at all.

Dark Ecology Interview (mp3)

This is not embed-able... click instead . Very good interviewer, Leonard Schwartz. We did it in February of this year.

Morton on The Future on the Radio

Houston Matters has some very interesting aspects and one of them is that Craig Cohen, the host, is so reflective.

Talking with Jeff VanderMeer in the LA Review of Books

They excerpted some great parts of a longer interview hosted by the fantastic Andrew Hageman. Jeff was attracted to the hyperobjects, which seems intuitive when you read his amazing prose. The odd thing is how incredibly similar our recent book covers have been.