2022 Literary Works - 2022
Amber Bradshaw - 2022
There is enough food in the world produced to feed everyone but ⅓ of all food produced is either lost or wasted. In this presentation, I’ll be showing you some ways you can either repurpose or reutilize some of the most common food scraps to make other pr...
Andy & Cammy Bonny - 2022
Big World, Small Planet is our way of telling the story of the Anthropocene through the medium of a playable card game. The game tells the story through rampant consumerism that fuels growth, and tells of a brighter future through degrowth and seeking gre...
Brylee Nelson & Kennedi Boyd - 2022
We chose to write a children’s book and decided to be artistic in this way, to show optimism. We know that it is not very realistic in the way that it ends, but everyone needs a little hope, especially the little ones.
Cameryn Bates - 2022
When it comes to the story of our world, it can be easy to focus on the negative aspects. And these things certainly are important to encourage the change that is needed.
Clara Harmon - 2022
For my final project, I chose to create a pocket zine about global warming. I wanted to break it down as simply as I could so that anyone who came across the small zine could understand it without any background knowledge.
Danelle Steele - 2022
My motivation is mostly to explore what this art has to say about climate change and how it is effective. I wanted to see how climate change and all its results were portrayed and how this art affected how we see climate change.
Emily Cragun - 2022
Watching the world as life passes on. Mother earth and child of humanity, Sit atop the mountains of earth.
Isabelle Scott - 2022
The final poem, “Exponential Economic Growth,” uses some of the most impactful quotes from Dr. Davies’ Anthropocene lectures and arranges these quotes in a way which reflects to the reader the issue of exponential economic growth and its unsustainability....
Lauren Anderson - 2022
Mother nature holds the world in her hands, but the climate crisis changes that fact. The earth is sick and hurting. If we continue the same path, we will reach a point of no return.
Lexie Walker - 2022
I decided to write a poem/story of a bleaching event from the perspective of a coral. I tried to imagine what being boiled alive felt like. How dying feels when you know that that’s it, it’s the end, and that no one will do anything.