<P><B>A methodological follow-up to <I>Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet</I></B><BR/> </P><P>The environmental and climatic crises of our time are fundamentally multispecies crises. And the Anthropocene, a time of “human-made” disruptions on a planetary scale, is a disruption of the fabric of life as a whole. The contributors to <I>Rubber Boots Methods for the Anthropocene</I> argue that understanding the multispecies nature of these disruptions requires multispecies methods.</P><P>Answering methodological challenges posed by the Anthropocene, <I>Rubber Boots Methods for the Anthropocene </I>retools the empirical study of the socioecological chaos of the contemporary moment across the arts, human science, and natural science. Based on critical landscape history, multispecies curiosity, and collaboration across disciplines and knowledge systems, the volume presents thirteen transdisciplinary accounts of practical methodological experimentation, highlighting diverse setting