Plants in Place is a collaborative study of vegetal phenomenology at the intersection of Edward S. Casey's phenomenology of place and Michael Marder's plant-thinking.
Preface: Walking Among Plants
Acknowledgments
1. The Placial Basis of Plant Sessility and Mobility
2. Peripheral Power: Structural Dynamics at the Edges of Plants
Interlude I. How Plants Think
3. Taking Trees Over the Edge
Interlude II. Plants Up-Close: The Case of Moss
4. The Shared Sociality of Trees, with Implications for Place
Interlude III. Plants from Afar: As Seen in Landscape Painting
5. Attachment and Detachment in the Place of Plants
Conclusion: The Fate of Places, the Fate of Plants
Notes
Index
Edward S. Casey and Michael Marder