Search

Ghost Fishing: Eco-Justice Poetry and the Diasporic City

"The call for eco-justice is inseperable from the call for racial and economic justice. Our hope for this exhibition is to not merely present this insight as analysis, but to embody and enact a way forward. As you view these installations, we invite you to consider the tenderness and care these plants need to exist in our shared world. How might we bring this same level of care to our interactions with one another? Who collaborates in the transformation of our world?" – From the Curatorial Statement

Menu
Skip to content
  • Kimmel Windows Exhibition
    • View Windows
    • Curatorial Statement
    • Acknowledgements
    • Photo Gallery
    • Press
    • Writing to the Windows
  • Collaborating Plants
    • View Plants
    • Colorín
    • Dutchman’s Laudanum
    • Kudzu
    • Moradilla
    • Pearly Gates Morning Glories
    • Little Bell Morning Glories
    • Bejuco Campana
    • Nettles
    • Ragweed
    • Singapore Daisy
    • Sunflower
  • Collaborating Humans
    • View Humans
    • Poets
    • Partner Organizations
    • Caretakers
    • Artists
    • Behind the Scenes
  • About the Book
  • Events

Sarah Smith

Sarah is tending to “Lunch in Nablus City Park” by Naomi Shihab Nye.

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Like this:

Like Loading...

Come see the windows

Kimmel, NYU
Create a website or blog at WordPress.com
×
    • Ghost Fishing: Eco-Justice Poetry and the Diasporic City
    • Customize
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Copy shortlink
    • Report this content
    • Manage subscriptions
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d bloggers like this: