Mon Feb 7 17:00

Environmental Humanities: The State of the Art

By The Community Garden Panel Talks

A panel with Stacy Alaimo, Eva Lövbrand, Astrida Neimanis, Jesper Olsson and Myra Hird, moderated by Jennifer Hamilton.

festival registration

Welcome to watch a video documentation of this event here.

It has been about a decade since the term “environmental humanities” entered into scholarly circulation. How are we to evaluate its work over this time? What has it achieved, how has it intervened, and what has it changed?

Estimated running time: 75 min

Participants

Stacy Alaimo is Professor of English and Core Faculty Member in Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon. Her books include Undomesticated Ground: Recasting Nature as Feminist Space (2000); Material Feminisms (co-edited, 2008); Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self (2010), and Exposed: Environmental Politics and Pleasures in Posthuman Times (2016).

Myra Hird has been involved in the Seed Box since its inception, representing Queen’s University as a consortium partner. Hird joined Queen’s University in 2004 as a Queen’s National Scholar, was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2014 (first round), and earned the Queen’s Excellence in Research Prize in 2015. More info Myra Hird.

Eva Lövbrand is Associate Professor in Environmental Change at the Department of Thematic Studies, Linköping University. Her research examines the ideas, knowledge systems and expert practices that inform (global) environmental politics and governance

Astrida Neimanis is Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in Feminist Environmental Humanities at UBC Okanagan, on unceded Syilx territories in Kelowna, BC, Okanagan. With a keen interest in community-building within and beyond academia, she has been involved with the Seed Box since 2015. Teaching and researching at the intersection of intersectional feminist theory and practice, and environmental change, she is particularly interested in water, weather, and bodies. She is author of Bodies of Water: Posthuman Feminist Phenomenology (Bloomsbury 2017). Since 2015, she has been co-facilitating (with Jennifer Mae Hamilton) of the (now) international reading group COMPOSTING feminisms & environmental humanities.

www.compostingfeminisms.com

Jesper Olsson is a former program director of Seed Box. He is Professor at the Department of Culture and Communication, Linköping University, where he leads the research group Literature, Media History, and Information Cultures (LMI) and the research project Representations and Reconfigurations of the Digital in Swedish Literature and Art 1950–2010 . His own research focuses on literature, art, and media history and his latest book is Spaceship, Time Machine. Öyvind Fahlström’s Ade-Ledic-Nander (2017). In 2013–2017 he was a member of Humtank, a national think tank for the humanities. He is also a literary critic in Svenska Dagbladet and is one of the founders of the art-literature-theory journal OEI.

Victoria Wibeck is professor of Environmental Change and at the Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research at Linköping University. She is Program Director of The Seed Box. She has a PhD in communication studies. Her research focuses on visualization and communication of climate change and other environmental challenges, sense-making of societal transformations towards sustainability, and development of qualitative methods for cross-country sense-making analysis.

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FEBRUARY 7–11 • 2022

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Presented by the SeedBox

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