Shoreline and ecopoetical happenings during Spring 2019
Please add more at will!
4/25 2019 Stice Feminist Lecturers 4:30-7:30 pm, Allen Library
Black Queer Studies & The State of Emergency
Black Presentism & The Practice of Ecstasy
, Aliyyah Abdur-Rahman, Associate Professor, American Studies and English, Brown University
Blackness, Historicity, & The Temporality of Invention
, C. Riley Snorton, Professor, English, Gender & Sexuality Studies, University of Chicago
5/4 Our Watery World: UW Aquatic Science Open House 1-4 pm, FSH & OSB
Come join us for a free afternoon of hands-on learning at Our Watery World, the second annual aquatic science open house at the UW. We will have tours of the UW Fish Collection, the Research Vessel Rachel Carson, and real working science labs at the UW School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences and School of Oceanography. Get your hands wet and learn about the aquatic science happening right here in Seattle — covering everything from freshwater to oceans, microscopic microbes to whales, and everything in between!
Bygone Events (2018)
4/15, 5 pm—Examining Our Earth Through Poems, Open Books bookstore.
*NOTE: Our own Nat Mengist will be speaking before this reading!*
Join Common Acre and Open Books for an evening of poetry and discussion about what environmentalism looks like and how it intersects with other injustices faced today. The event organizer and host is Seattle Youth Poet Laureate Lily Baumgart. Readers include Aisha Al-Amin, Quenton Baker, Namaka Auwee-Dekker, and Sierra Nelson.
4/26, 6 – 7 p.m. – UW Bothell, Landscape, Power, and Popular Education with Laura Pulido
How can popular education use people’s everyday experience of landscape andplace to illuminate historical struggles and power dynamics? In this talk,
Laura Pulido discusses two projects: A People’s Guide, a radical tour guide,
and Sangre en la Tierra (Blood in the Soil), a historical atlas of foundational
white supremacy based on state-sanctioned historical markers. Both are popular
education projects intended to transform racial consciousness in order to move
towards racial justice.
Laura Pulido is professor and head of Ethnic Studies and professor of geography
at the University of Oregon. Her current teaching and research focus on white
supremacy, environmental justice, landscape, and popular education. She is the
author of several books, including Environmentalism and Economic Justice: Two
Chicano Struggles in the Southwest (Arizona 1996), Black, Brown, Yellow and
Left: Radical Activism in Los Angeles (UC Press 2006), and A People’s Guide to
Los Angeles (with Laura Barraclough and Wendy Cheng, UC Press 2012).
https://www.laurapulido.org/
LOCATION:University of Washington Bothell Campus– DISCOVERY HALL 061
RSVP requested here>>
https://laurapulido.eventbrite.com
This event is part of a nascent conversation around the development of The
People’s Geography of Seattle Project: http://peoplesgeographyofseattle.org/
5/17, 4:30-5:30. Communications 120. Douglas Kahn: “The Case for Energies in the Arts”
5/18, 3:30-5:30 pm. Savery Hall 264. The Forgetting of Race in the Anthropocene Nancy Tuana, Philosophy, Penn State University Benjamin Rabinowitz Lecture in Environmental Ethics and keynote for “Eye of the Storm” http://philosophy.la.psu.edu/directory/nat3
While recent work on gender and climate change has brought to light the differential impacts of climate change on women and men, far less attention has been directed to race. Applying an intersectional perspective reveals the forgetting of race in the discourses and practices of the Anthropocene. These dimensions can be revealed through, for example, attunement to the impact of institutions, examination of the discourses and strategies for mitigation and adaptation, and attentiveness to the framing of climate impacts.
5/19“, 9 am-5 pm Eye of the Storm: Climate Ethics in an Age of Inaction, Graduate and Early Careers Philosophy conference, CMU 202/204 https://simpsoncenter.org/calendar?trumbaEmbed=view%3devent%26eventid%3d125502166&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWWpFNE1qWXdObU13TTJFNSIsInQiOiJ5RnJ1ZHBYUkVJZTVTaGJraGRUbHFPRHFkVk1Nb01NRGowd0hINHQ4eHFMMUpoeTNITXcybGFOcTlDR3A5RjhEMWhGa3RpWUxtVmlFQitBaHArTEJWQjhyN3ZVazlEdUVUblRxb1VjUVZJNEtPM3JGOElNQVNRSmlMam5UbHgwUSJ9