This is the fourteenth post in my series that explores the most-used words in the top stories shared amongst Environmental Historians and Environmental Humanities scholars on Twitter each week.
Here are the top articles amongst environmental historians and humanities scholars this past week (June 5 – June 11, 2017):
Monday: “Inventing (the) English: Racism, Multilingualism and Medieval Studies” by Rachel E. Moss, RACHEL E. MOSS: Blogging on feminism, medieval studies, teaching and learning
Tuesday: “Corbyn delivered a speech that could win him the election but the BBC isn’t showing it [VIDEO]” by Emily Apple, The Canary
Wednesday: “In Trump Country, Renewable Energy Is Thriving” by Justin Gillis and Nadia Popovich, The New York Times
Thursday: “Placement at The Royal Asiatic Society” by Carly Bishop, Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland
Friday: “Surviving the Climate Communications Environment” by Doug McNeall, Doug McNeall’s Blog
Saturday: “Hurtful Histories: Louis Riel and Why Accuracy Matters” by Andrea Eidinger, Unwritten Histories
Sunday: “How Republicans came to embrace anti-environmentalism” by Christopher Sellers, Vox
Top Words
1. environmental
2. Indigenous
3. states
4. climate
5. also
6. English
7. energy
8. Métis
9. language
10. Text
11. history
12. people
13. state
14. wind
15. many
16. new