Papers by eric ellingsen

So complicated like a special bird which I don't know the name oflet me ask a nightingale.I d... more So complicated like a special bird which I don't know the name oflet me ask a nightingale.I don't know this it feels like it looks like a metal him.Meddling, read your lovely but not I love you.Ifs chh not ch. Ifs chh not ch. It's hccch.Read a woman pinches the folds in her jacket. She says this is notthese. Read how she touches the part of her face under the eyesand says without sounds light lungs. Read your wrinkles. Read it isnot this kind of folded time but the space of all things in all things.Read today is not like we think today is, today is not like today is, itis not like this.This means we are brought here.Read she takes the sheet of folded paper from me. Know at firstshe is not sure what this means. Know she doesn't want to try toknow what this means. Know I know I embarrass her when I askher again what this means please. I ask anyway just to see. Knowshe does not give me back my words, hesitating like a. Drip. Readnow memory* Read how what memory can reme...
Models are an essential component of the architect's design process. As tools of translation,... more Models are an essential component of the architect's design process. As tools of translation, models assist the exploration of the possible and illustrate the actual. While models have traditionally served as representational and structural studies, they are increasingly being used to suggest and solve new spatial and structural configurations. "Models," the eleventh volume of the highly regarded journal "306090," explores the role of the architectural model today in relation to the idea, the diagram, the technique, and the material. Models includes contributions from engineers, scientists, poets, painters, photographers, historians, urbanists, and architects both young and experienced.
Studies in the History of Gardens and Designed Landscape, 2005
Studies in the History of Gardens & Designed Landscapes, 2005

The human population has reached some 6.4 billion individuals. Over 800 million hectares (i.e., n... more The human population has reached some 6.4 billion individuals. Over 800 million hectares (i.e., nearly 38% of the total landmass of the earth) is committed to producing crops to support this still growing population. Farming has dramatically transformed the landscape, replacing and redefining functional ecosystems. Undeniably, a reliable food supply has allowed for the evolution of culturally robust societies. Ironically, farming has created a set of new hazards unique to activities involved with the production of food, and has exacerbated many older ones. Exposure to toxic levels of agrochemicals (pesticides, fungicides) and a wide spectrum of geohelminths are transmitted with regularity at the tropical and sub-tropical agricultural interface. Emerging infections, many of which are viral zoonoses (e.g., Ebola, Lassa fever) have adapted to the human host following our encroachment into their environments. In 50 years, the human population is expected to increase to some 8.3 billion ...
World Literature Today, 2015
World Literature Today, 2015
So complicated like a special bird which I don' t know the name of let me ask a nightingale.
this is part of this
ongoing
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Book Reviews by eric ellingsen
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Papers by eric ellingsen
Book Reviews by eric ellingsen