Ayja Bounous grew up at the base of Little Cottonwood Canyon in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah, where the rhythmic pulse of the seasons was as much a part of life as breathing. It was not until her adult years, however, that she realized how her whole world revolved around Wasatch snow—from the places she loved, to the activities that she enjoyed doing, to the relationships in her life. She earned a Master's of Arts in Environmental Humanities from the University of Utah in 2017, and went on to publish her master’s thesis, Shaped by Snow: Defending the Future of Winter, with Torrey House Press in 2019.
EH Blog
Alisha Anderson graduated from the Environmental Humanities Program in 2015. During her time in the program, she made art about the Oquirrh Mountains. Since then, she has created with Great Salt Lake, been a Spiritual Ecology Fellow with the Kalliopeia Foundation, and lived at the edge of Bears Ears as an Artist in Residence with Utah Diné Bikéyah. She just defended (and passed!) her thesis to receive her MFA from the Art & Ecology Program at the University of New Mexico. Her project focused on the energy transition in Carbon Country, Utah. Overall, her work focuses on the confluence of identity and Earth, in an attempt to question (and reposition) how humans fit in this world.
Through fire, forest, salt, and sky, Morgan lives and works to ground herself in the ecosystems of the American West. As an ORISE USDA Climate Change Communications Fellow, she translates climate science and develops communication materials related to climate change in forestry, agriculture, and rangelands. Prior to working at the Northwest Climate Hub, Morgan worked for four years as a wildland firefighter, and for three years as an environmental educator in Rocky Mountain and Denali National Parks.
Tiana Birrell is a multimedia artist and curator from Massachusetts. She received her MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and her MS in Environmental Humanities from the University of Utah. She currently resides in Salt Lake City where she investigates the copious amount of water and energy used by data centers in Salt Lake and Utah Valley. She uses photography, video, projections, installations, and performative lectures to consider these questions as well as bring these invisible structures into visibility.
Featured Posts
Tag Cloud
- utah award in the environmental humanities (2)
- community engagement (46)
- practitioner-in-residence (8)
- activist (1)
- downwinder (1)
- staff (1)
- student (20)
- alumni (16)
- students (2)
- thesis (3)
- project (3)
- exam (1)
- faculty (24)
- Native research methods (1)
- 1U4U (1)
- graduation (2)
- research (10)
- event (2)
- outdoor recreation (4)
- outreach (1)
- admissions (1)
- environmental justice (11)
- STEMCAP (2)
- STEM (2)
- water (7)
- communications (3)
- humanities (1)
- Taft-Nicholson Center (1)
- director (3)
- API (1)
- Asian American (1)
- Pacific Islander (1)
- Indigenous (2)
- Shoshone (1)
- Great Salt Lake (8)
- Bear River (1)
- land acknowledgement (1)
- STEMAP (1)
- public engagement (1)
- science (2)
- science communication (2)
- Wilkes Center (1)
- climate change (6)
- climate science (1)
- climate policy (1)
- policymaking (1)
- funding (1)
- storytelling (1)
- radio (1)
- journalism (1)
- racial justice (1)
- outdoor education (1)
- writing (9)
- non-fiction (1)
- energy extraction (1)
- queer (1)
- reading (1)
- environmental education (5)
- affect theory (1)
- media (1)
- rhetoric (1)
- snow (1)
- winter (1)
- creative writing (1)
- book (1)
- memoir (1)
- symposium (1)
- research professor (1)
- history of science (1)
- coevolutionary studies (1)
- American West (1)
- history (1)
- Native history (1)
- public history (1)
- energy (3)
- art (4)
- just transition (1)
- Great Salt Lake Symposium (1)
- narrative strategy (1)
- political science (1)
- Mellon Community Fellowship (1)
- environmental health (1)
- air quality (1)
- disability justice (1)
- philosophy (1)
- Anthropocene (1)
- West Desert (1)
- Pony Express (1)
- bicycling (2)
- environmental communication (1)
- queer ecology (1)
- wildfire (1)
- climate communication (1)
- forests (2)
- Indigenous sovereignty (1)
- climate grief (1)
- activism (1)
- decolonize (1)
- Indigenous history (2)
- Native sovereignty (1)
- trees (1)
- plants (1)
- phd (1)
- policy (1)
- collaboration (1)
- governance (1)
- land management (1)
- forest management (1)
- bikes (1)
- advocacy (1)
- nuclear energy (1)
- literature (1)
- film (1)
- leadership (1)
- research professorship (1)
- nuclear narrative (1)
- energy democracy (1)
- climate justice (2)
- books (1)
- environmental literature (1)
- political education (1)
- education (1)
- youth (1)
- ecocriticism (1)
- digital humanities (1)
- poetry (1)
- food justice (1)
- fellowship (2)
- Mellon Foundation (1)
- Colorado River (1)
- nonprofit (1)
- Transform (1)
- gender studies (1)
- Oceania (1)
- environmental leadership (1)
- communication (1)
- english (1)
- final project (1)
- diversity equity inclusion (2)
- sustainability (1)
- food sovereignty (1)
- gardening (2)
- internship (1)
- national parks (1)
- American West Center (1)