On January 25th we held in Vienna the sixth live reading of our essay “Ecology is Dead… and We Have Killed It.” Our collaborating artists on this occasion were Ruth Anderwald and Leonhard Grond, who performed with us the history of the Prater in relation to our text: the Vivarium which, between 1902 and 1945, led biological research in Vienna from its location there; the story of Jakob Moreno, a disciple of Freud who, based here, brought psychoanalysis into the social realm; or the terrible memory of the human zoo that, at the end of the 19th century, exhibited an African community. These scenes intertwined with the reading of different paragraphs from our essay: “Rocks,” “The Ecological Corpse,” “Geo-Bio Continuum,” or “Our Own Ontology,” among others. The result was a space–time palimpsest for thinking together: What is ecology? Can we root our practices in its foundations? Or are we anesthetized, no longer truly knowing what it even means? We concluded the reading from the Prater’s historic Ferris wheel, an imposing artificial mountain. Thank you to Ruth, to Leo, and to everyone who joined us. And thank you, Linda Velasquez Ramos, for documenting the event. Have you already gotten your copy of Ecology is Dead?