Description: This book highlights how digital rhetorics can provide individuals with ecological readiness and the ability to craft more-than-human worlds of contingent wellbeing while also allowing for vulnerable flourishment.
Review Quotes: "Rosenfeld encourages us to hold our own vulnerability in one hand as we hold flourishment in the other during this difficult time of living in the Anthropocene. In a time when we most need affirmative ethics, Rosenfeld offers a tonic for this living, examining digital spaces that give rise to hope by their attention to nonhuman worldbuilding. Through care and attention to nonhumans--trash, plants and meat alternatives, snakes, infrastructures, textiles, and of course, chickens--Rosenfeld attunes her readers to a world in which living well, and being ecologically ready to do so, can only be done in tandem with our more-than-human kin." --Jennifer Clary-Lemon, University of Waterloo