If Clary-Lemons Nestwork is about ecological care, it is also itself an act of ecological care: a material-symbolic act of resistance and love and hope.
Joshua Trey Barnett ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature & Environment By thoughtfully blending rhetorical, new-materialist, and posthumanist approaches, Clary-Lemon illuminates the rhetorical capacity of more-than-human others and demonstrates how an attunement to their arguments might reorient human-nonhuman relations in the face of environmental precarity and species decline.
Dylan Annandale Rhetoric Society Quarterly Clary-Lemon is a rare combination: a talented theorist and a talented storyteller. Working in common with the barn swallow, the chimney swift, and the bobolink, she weaves together the ecological, the rhetorical, and the posthuman to invite us to pay attention differently to birds, to humans, to infrastructure, and to the ways we might make and care for these relations.
Caroline Gottschalk Druschke, Professor of Composition and Rhetoric, University of WisconsinMadison