How Rivers Break Away and Meet Again by Theresa Kishkan
I am a reader of atlases. I’ve always been drawn to them, the tattered cloth-bound copies
January 28, 2019A rewilding diary by Emily Warner
I found myself in a landscape still held in the tail end of winter. The birch, previously aflame with the colours of their autumn leaves, showed their exposed skeletons of deep chestnut branches…
January 8, 2019A Year in Kingcombe: December, by Anita Roy
Outside, the large, circular bird-feeder hanging on a branch of the bare hawthorn tree is aflitter with birds: blue tits, great tits, dunnock, sparrows, robins, wrens, even a great spotted woodpecker zooms in for a spell.
December 19, 2018The New Wild by Anna Tsing
What does it take to make a native plant or animal or fungus abandon its companionable habits to carve a path of destruction across the landscape?
December 6, 2018A Dim Dark Smudge by Melanie Challenger
Over the past few years, I have been looking into the complexities of this debate and I can tell you only one thing with confidence: it’s a huge, vigorous muddle.
December 4, 2018The Broken Frame by Pippa Marland
In the final few miles we began to come across the bodies of dead birds: guillemots – first one and then another, and another, and another – feathers water-logged and bedraggled.
November 30, 2018On Extinction by Tim Ingold
Extinction is for others, not for us. We’ll never know
What words turned out to be our last, what steps we took
Into the abyss.November 29, 2018Words of Life by Nicholas Evans
The reach of faunal extinction, out into places that are seemingly still untouched by industry, agriculture or urbanisation, has struck me at a number of places where I have carried out linguistic fieldwork.
November 28, 2018Vultures on the Brink by Anita Roy
What happens when a tapestry that took millions of years to create begins to fray at the edges – and what does it mean that we are unstitching ourselves from other creatures, disentangling ourselves from those to whom we have been historically bound? We are living through those unprecedented questions now.
November 27, 2018Tallgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
As we stand together for Remembrance Day For Lost Species, I want to raise a song for all of those beings knit together by the roots of prairie sod. Our work is not to eulogise them, but to fuel the fires of renewal.
November 26, 2018A Year in Kingcombe by Anita Roy: November
The hills seem to draw back from the sky, as though they are the curtains and it is the main stage. And today, the sky is a total scene-stealer.
November 26, 2018
About
THE CLEARING is an online journal published by Little Toller Books that offers writers and artists a dedicated space in which to explore and celebrate the landscapes we live in. Our contributors are encouraged to go forth and find distinctive visions that startle us, rural or urban, modern or prehistoric, industrial, post-industrial, fantastical, natural, political, however they come. But each must be meaningful, surprising, felt.
Submissions
The editors welcome original submissions in written, audio and visual genres. Submission should reflect The Clearing/Little Toller’s concern with the natural environment, but within this broad subject-matter we encourage a diversity of interpretation and approach.
If you’d like to submit work to The Clearing, please email theclearing@littletoller.co.uk. Please refer to the submission guidelines. While we receive many submissions we will get back to you as soon as we are able.
Categories
- Diary (33)
- Essay (243)
- Film (16)
- illustration (11)
- Interview (14)
- Photography (4)
- Podcast (6)
- Poetry (124)
- Reading (2)
- Short Story (1)
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Podcast
From the Archive
- Red kite – back from the brink by Jodie BondShe boasts a shimmer of feathers, tobacco and rust, a …
- Dear Kadu by Pam Zinneman-HopeAt the beach we hunt among Jurassic clays and shales …
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