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Capitalism, Climate, and Cultural Study Keynote

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
UIUC Environmental Humanities Research Cluster, iSEE, Landscape Architecture
Location
Levis Faculty Center 210
Date
Sep 28, 2023   5:00 pm  
Contact
John Levi Barnard
E-Mail
jbarnard@illinois.edu
Views
59
Originating Calendar
iSEE Sustainability Calendar

Join the Humanities Research Institute for this keynote — “Mediating Immediacy: Climate Crux & Collective Arts” by Anna Kornbluh, Professor of English at University of Illinois Chicago. 

The keynote kicks off an all-day Symposium Sept. 29. Description: In its most recent report on the projected impacts of global warming, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change suggests that the looming crisis will require not only new technologies, but also “fundamental changes to how society functions, including changes to underlying values, worldviews, ideologies, social structures, political and economic systems, and power relationships.” In framing it this way, the panel acknowledges what scholars across the humanities and social sciences have long been arguing—and what this symposium aims specifically to address: that climate change is a problem of culture in the broadest sense, ranging from global economic and political systems to our tastes in literature, television, travel, and other forms of consumption. Beginning with a keynote by Anna Kornbluh (English, University of Illinois, Chicago), and proceeding through panels considering colonial-capitalist development in India and the United States, the symposium will explore the historical emergence of this culture through its aesthetic forms, from literary production and political rhetoric to infrastructural projects and the built environment. More generally, we hope to advance and elaborate the convictions that bring us together as scholars simultaneously facing a climate crisis and a crisis in the humanities and higher ed more generally: that climate change constitutes a planetary emergency; that capitalism is a primary driver, both in the present and historically, of that emergency; and that literary and cultural studies are critical for understanding how we got into this predicament and for finding our way out.


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