Web exclusives

Resurgence Web exclusives are online-only articles selected by our editors for their relevance and high quality.

As a bi-monthly magazine, we rarely have enough room in our printed pages to include all the excellent material that has been researched or commissioned by the editorial team. We publish these articles as ‘Web exclusives’: the articles that for reasons of space and overall balance of topics did not appear in Resurgence magazine.

Our Web exclusives are available free of charge to all our website visitors. The articles are listed below with the most recent articles first.

Exclusives may also be viewed via the bi-monthly table of contents for Resurgence magazine online. Articles are listed in the next issue of the magazine; for example, Web exclusives published in May appear in the contents pages of the July/August issue of Resurgence online.

Articles can also be located through our article archive search facility, with a search either by subject matter or author.

Web Exclusives • Article

Let's have some decent bread • Andrew Whitley

Issue 249 • June/July 2008 • Music for Transformation

It's easy to make proper bread if you give it time.

Five-minute Interview • Donna Duggan

Issue 249 • June/July 2008 • Music for Transformation

Idealism and Inspiration

Colours of The Earth • Philip Vann

Issue 248 • May/June 2008 • The Money Delusion: In Search of True Wealth

The Paintings of Daniel Chatto.

Seen Unseen • Christopher P Wood

Issue 248 • May/June 2008 • The Money Delusion: In Search of True Wealth

The importance of imagination and intuition.

Towards A Happier Planet • Nic Marks

Issue 248 • May/June 2008 • The Money Delusion: In Search of True Wealth

Happiness that doesn’t cost the Earth.

Celebrating Vegetarianism • Annette Pinner

Issue 248 • May/June 2008 • The Money Delusion: In Search of True Wealth

An interview with Satish Kumar

TRANSITION TIME • Richard Heinberg

Issue 245 • November/December 2007 • The Moral Economy

From the Age of Excess to the Era of Moderation.

WORKING WITH ANGER • Thubten Chodron

Issue 245 • November/December 2007 • The Moral Economy

Anger is a passing cloud on the pure nature of mind.

PASTORALISTS • Kate Eshelby

Issue 244 • September/October 2007 • The Green Imperative

Peace and security issues are highlighted as tribal peoples attempt to adapt to a fast warming climate.

FOOD FOR THOUGHT • Karen Rideout

Issue 244 • September/October 2007 • The Green Imperative

There is no point in innovation for its own sake – innovation must have a purpose. Innovation in the food industry is actually damaging the quality of food.

CLAYMAN • John Moat

Issue 244 • September/October 2007 • The Green Imperative

Andrew Wood sees himself as a “clayman” – which is a register of how, for more than thirty years, clay has been his medium and everything he has needed in order to exercise and find his way with his extraordinary skills as modeller, carver and painter.

A CAUSE FOR CELEBRATION • Deborah Ravetz

Issue 244 • September/October 2007 • The Green Imperative

The Life and Work of Sylvia von Hartmann

ALL ROADS LEAD TO ERMO! • Tony Gee

Issue 243 • July/August 2007 • The Point of Return

Workshop is 21st century education.

WILD ASPARAGUS • Andrew Wingfield

Issue 242 • May/June 2007 • Do we need God? / Food Futures

A journey of remembrance and protest.

ILLUMINATION • Nomi Rowe

Issue 242 • May/June 2007 • Do we need God? / Food Futures

Meditation and the art of amusement - the work of Nevil Sattentau

EXPLORING THE EARTH • Fulvia Zavan

Issue 242 • May/June 2007 • Do we need God? / Food Futures

The artist Jonathan Newdick wanders in a field of complementary meanings.

LIFE WITHOUT e-POCKETS • Rajesh Shah

Issue 241 • March/April 2007 • Urban Ecology

Computers make it easy to find stuff however it’s organised; that means i never really organise and simplify my stuff.

NOVEL TIMES • Lindsay Clarke

Issue 240 • January/February 2007 • There is no wealth but life

What is the role of today’s writer?

HELENA BLAVATSKY • Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke

Issue 240 • January/February 2007 • There is no wealth but life

The evolution of Theosophy

LAND AND LIVELIHOODS • Jules Pretty

Issue 239 • November/December 2006 • A Far Cry from Christmas

Small family farms do more than just produce food. (Editors' Selection)

TRUSTEES OF NATURE • Oliver Lowenstein

Issue 239 • November/December 2006 • A Far Cry from Christmas

Moving beyond heritage conservation to embrace environmental concerns. (Editors' Selection)

SIGNS OF OPTIMISM • Nicols Fox

Issue 238 • September/October 2006 • Celebrating 40 Years of Resurgence

The film An Inconvenient Truth is drawing a healthy audience.

GREEN STREETS ARE 'NAKED' STREETS • Philip Booth

Issue 235 • March/April 2006 • From Ownership to Relationship

Removing 'clutter' can help to reclaim our streets and make them safer.

ALICE IN OXFORD • Sara Hudston

Issue 235 • March/April 2006 • From Ownership to Relationship

Jeweller Wendy Ramshaw steps through the Looking-Glass.

AMBASSADORS OF PEACE • Ian Prattis

Issue 235 • March/April 2006 • From Ownership to Relationship

A determination to be peace, and courage to stand for it, no matter what, create the energy and power for change.

ONE PLANET LIVING • Jonathan Dawson

Issue 234 • January/February 2006 • Earth, Wealth and Wellbeing

An ecovillager visits BedZed - a model and demonstration centre for eco-construction and green lifestyles

CULTURAL DNA • Rosemary Wilkie

Issue 233 • November/December 2005 • The Answer is still Peace

Introducing a revolutionary model of the development of consciousness and human value systems.

TACKLING TERRORISM IS WOMEN'S WORK • Scilla Elworthy

Issue 233 • November/December 2005 • The Answer is still Peace

What women are doing to encourage a 'Culture of Peace'.

THE NECESSARY ANGEL • Joan Walley

Issue 232 • September/October 2005 • Nature Knows us - do we know nature?

Balancing ideals with actions is a constant challenge.

THE MOUNTAIN AND THE VALLEY • Rabbi Lawrence Troster

Issue 232 • September/October 2005 • Nature Knows us - do we know nature?

Environmentalism transcends religious boundaries.

BEYOND PERCEPTION • Deepak Chopra

Issue 231 • July/August 2005 • The Four Pillars of Sustainability

In Part One of this article (Issue 231), we discussed how to access the 'eyes of the soul' in order to perceive the true reality of Consciousness. In Part Two, we explore these concepts at a deeper level and look at the qualities of the soul. we discussed how to access the 'eyes of the soul' in order to perceive the true reality of Consciousness. In Part Two we explore these concepts at a deeper level and look at the qualities of the soul

THE REFLECTIVE LIFE • Judy Gahagan

Issue 230 • May/June 2005 • Inspired Designs

Staying human by writing poems.

DEAD-WOOD • Phil Page

Issue 230 • May/June 2005 • Inspired Designs

Just another blot on the landscape or a valuable aesthetic and wildlife habitat?

SCHOOL OF CARING • Clive Davidson

Issue 230 • May/June 2005 • Inspired Designs

Learning at Brockwood Park is based on ecology and a sense of the sacred.

FORGET YOUR BOTANY • Jan van Boeckel

Issue 226 • September/October 2004 • Ecoliteracy : Dancing Earth

Developing children's sensibility to nature through arts-based environmental education.

INJURY AND GLOBALISATION • Ian Roberts

Issue 226 • September/October 2004 • Ecoliteracy : Dancing Earth

If business had to pay the full social and environmental cost of transport there would be less enthusiasm for transnational trade.

BREAKING OUT FROM THE INSIDE • Amira Sumner

Issue 226 • September/October 2004 • Ecoliteracy : Dancing Earth

Environmental action needs global support, but its seed is in individual action.

LOVING CHILDREN • David W. Orr

Issue 226 • September/October 2004 • Ecoliteracy : Dancing Earth

Ecological design offers a gift of life, harmony and beauty to our children

issue cover 249

Cover: Minature steel drums in a craft market Tobago Photograph: Anna Watson/Axiom

Article availability

Free to view

Free to view soon

Buy to view

Buy to view soon

Not available to view

Magazine