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In the imaginations of some folks, movements towards food sovereignty live primarily in idyllic community gardens, small-scale organic farms, local farmers' markets, and farm-to-table restaurants. But the work of sovereignty lives within spaces of deeper complexity – spaces woven together by the seeds of joys, suffering, commitments, creativity, and resilience. Derrick McDonald and Shephali Patel call in the stories and voices that remind us that sovereignty lives in our past, present, and futures. --- Learn more and support Black Star Farmers @ blackstarfarmers.org --- Learn more about Food Culture Collective @ https://foodculture.org and HEAL Food Alliance @ https://healfoodalliance.org --- Derrick McDonald: https://www.hackerarchitects.com/derrick-mcdonald StoryMap of the initial seeding of Black Lives Memorial Garden in Cal Anderson Coverage on 2021 Black Lives Matter protests and CHOP/CHAZ: https://www.democracynow.org/2020/6/11/seattle_activists_create_autonomous_zone_near https://crosscut.com/focus/2020/11/seattles-cal-anderson-park-microcosm-national-upheaval Watch the documentary “As Long as the Rivers Run” to learn about Bernie Whitebear and a legacy of indigenous land and food sovereignty movements in the Pacific Northwest Overview of Daybreak Star and the Fort Lawton occupation: https://www.seattle.gov/cityarchives/exhibits-and-education/online-exhibits/daybreak-star-indian-cultural-center Omari Garrett and the occupation of the Colman School Overview: https://www.historylink.org/File/8602 A complex history: https://www.seattlemet.com/arts-and-culture/2008/12/1008-feat-divided https://africanamericanheritagemuseumandculturalcenter.org/synopsis/ Stay connected with Shephali at shephali.earth Recommended Reading List inspired by Derrick Spill: Scenes of Black Feminist Fugitivity by Alexis Pauline Gumbs Woman on the Edge of Time by Marge Piercy Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler Kindred by Octavia Butler The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene by Donna J. Haraway
At the Deanery Project this spring, I met with Dr. Jenn MacLatchy (she/they), who is an artist, a kayak instructor, and researcher of settler descent living in Mi'kma'ki. Her doctoral research was focused on using arts-based methods to engage with waste, weeds, and wastelands to form a settler method for decolonizing relationship with land and tending to liveable post-Anthropocene futures. In this episode, you'll hear about this fascinating doctoral research and her art practice, which is process-based and focused on marine plastics, waste paper, and invasive plants, and different ways of weaving these materials together to explore relationships in the inextricably interconnected living world. We hear her perspective of seeing garbage as artifacts that can help us understand our culture, and about the problem –and the irony– of plastics. She shares the view that humans aren't inherently bad for the environment, and offers an interesting twist on what it can mean to be less materialistic. We also talk about some lesser discussed aspects of Japanese knotweed (...and my secret love of the plant.)EPISODE RESOURCES:The Deanery Project The website of Marlene Creates, an artist in Newfoundland A website about the Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes area and protectionBooks referenced by Jenn:Flotsametrics and the floating world: How one man's obsession with runaway sneakers and rubber ducks revolutionized ocean science. C. Ebbesmeyer & E. Scigliano (2009)Pollution is Colonialism. , M. Liboiron (2021)Waste. B. Thill (2015) Braiding Sweetgrass. Robin Wall Kimmerer (2015) Living Treaties: Narrating Mi'kmaw Treaty Relations. Marie Battiste (2016) Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene. Anna Tsing, Heather Swanson, Elaine Gan, Nils Bubandt (2017)Staying with the Trouble. Donna J. Haraway (2016)Some website information about the Peace and Friendship Treaties from:Canadian EncyclopediaThe Government of CanadaL'nuey
Welcome to episode 0 of season four of the conscient podcast, Sounding Modernity, five-minute sound meditations, published every Sunday from January 1 through December 31, 2023. My name is Claude Schryer and I'm happy to be back podcasting about art and the ecological crisis after a 10 month break.I'm talking to you today from the unceded traditional territory of the Anishinaabe Algonquin Nation, also known as Ottawa, where my family and I are grateful to live. Veuillez prendre note qu'une version en français de cet épisode et de toute la saison 4 est disponible sur le canal balado conscient et sur Youtube. So, what is Sounding Modernity? In a nutshell, every sunday in 2023 I'm going to publish a 5 minute sound art work comprised pof field recording, soundscapes compositions, narration and silence, lots of silence, en francais and in english, that explores how we listen modernity, topics such acceptance, aesthetics, appropriation, collapse, complicity, despair, entanglement, exploitation, failure, fiction, hope (maybe also hopelessness) humour, kindness, unlistening, reciprocity, resilience, separability, validation, violence, worlding and many more I haven't thought of yet. Every week will be a new opportunity to create a dialogue for shared learning and unlearning, learning and unlearning, learning, unlearning.Overall the idea is to ‘stay with the trouble' as Dr. Donna J. Haraway suggests.At the end of each episode you'll be asked to ponder a question - to think about a complex issue - and if you feel comfortable, you can respond on conscient.ca to the question, in any way you wish : with words, images, sounds, video, etc. I will respond to all submissions. My hope is that we find a way, together, to navigate our way out of modernity's trappings and to create, step by step, the conditions for other worlds to emerge.Let me give you an example of an episode. This is the trailer for episode 1, of season 4, which is actually episode 101 of the entire podcast series. It's called tension and what you'll hear is the question that i mentioned earlier. Now I won't get into some of the references and theoretical underpinnings of this project however I invite you to read a blog I wrote about the project on conscient.ca. In terms of promotion I'll be using social media etc which you are welcome to share but I think the best way to promote this kind of project is through word of mouth so If you like what you hear, please tell your friends and colleagues. You'll find links to subscribe to the weekly conscient newsletter, conscient podcast in English, au balado conscient en francais, to the conscient YouTube channel and to the conscient podcast Facebook and instagram pages at subscribe.I want to end this intro by warmly thanking my collaborators and also the Canada Council, Strategic Innovation Fund Seed grant for their support of this project.You can reach me at claude@conscient.ca Thanks for listening and I hope to hear from you during the season. *END NOTES FOR ALL EPISODESHere is a link for more information on season 5. Please note that, in parallel with the production of the conscient podcast and it's francophone counterpart, balado conscient, I publish a Substack newsletter called ‘a calm presence' which are 'short, practical essays for those frightened by the ecological crisis'. To subscribe (free of charge) see https://acalmpresence.substack.com. You'll also find a podcast version of each a calm presence posting on Substack or one your favorite podcast player.Also. please note that a complete transcript of conscient podcast and balado conscient episodes from season 1 to 4 is available on the web version of this site (not available on podcast apps) here: https://conscient-podcast.simplecast.com/episodes.Your feedback is always welcome at claude@conscient.ca and/or on conscient podcast social media: Facebook, X, Instagram or Linkedin. I am grateful and accountable to the earth and the human labour that provided me with the privilege of producing this podcast, including the toxic materials and extractive processes behind the computers, recorders, transportation systems and infrastructure that made this production possible. Claude SchryerLatest update on April 2, 2024
In this episode, Kim finds out that Saronik gets a little weird when it comes to dogs. We talk about Donna J. Haraway's book The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness. Haraway studies methods (and practitioners) of agility training in order to try and figure out what these praxes that bring together nature and culture, by means of which humans relate with species they have evolved with. Saronik is waiting to meet Miles, Kim's amazing Newfie. Below, you can see him with Toby. He met Toby on two occasions a year apart, at the same cafe in Bushwick, completely by accident. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
In this episode, Kim finds out that Saronik gets a little weird when it comes to dogs. We talk about Donna J. Haraway's book The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness. Haraway studies methods (and practitioners) of agility training in order to try and figure out what these praxes that bring together nature and culture, by means of which humans relate with species they have evolved with. Saronik is waiting to meet Miles, Kim's amazing Newfie. Below, you can see him with Toby. He met Toby on two occasions a year apart, at the same cafe in Bushwick, completely by accident. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, Kim finds out that Saronik gets a little weird when it comes to dogs. We talk about Donna J. Haraway's book The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness. Haraway studies methods (and practitioners) of agility training in order to try and figure out what these praxes that bring together nature and culture, by means of which humans relate with species they have evolved with. Saronik is waiting to meet Miles, Kim's amazing Newfie. Below, you can see him with Toby. He met Toby on two occasions a year apart, at the same cafe in Bushwick, completely by accident. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/animal-studies
Desde España, les presentamos a la editorial consonni —así con minúsculas— un espacio cultural independiente. Su proyecto incluye trabajos que abordan el arte, la literatura, la radio y la educación. Algunas de las escritoras que han publicado son: Cristina Rivera Garza, libros editados como Hijas del futuro, editado por Cristina Jurado y Lola Robles, traducciones de libros sobre feminismo como Marge Piercy y Donna J. Haraway. Conversamos con la editora María Mir Dean que colabora con la editorial desde 1999. No se pierdan ver su descripción y algunas obras de su catálogo en www.Hablemosescritoras.com y visiten su página https://www.consonni.org/es. Libros disponibles en Shop Escritoras. https://shopescritoras.com/collections/consonni
Co-scénariste de la BD « L'Âge d'or » avec Cyril Pedrosa, cette libraire arlésienne s'immerge dans les récits « trouble-fêtes » et autres « fabulations » inter-espèces de la philosophe et zoologue américaine Donna Haraway. « Depuis l'aube du premier jour, nous semons les plaines d'un nouveau monde où, sous la courbe lente du soleil, l'ombre ne fait que passer. » En 2018, les librairies virent surgir un livre imposant : le premier volume de L'Âge d'or, dessiné par Cyril Pedrosa et scénarisé par ce dernier en compagnie de Roxanne Moreil, aux éditions Dupuis. Une fable médiévale, dont l'ambition est de concilier « récit d'aventures haletant » et « utopie politique », en veillant à créer un personnage féminin complexe, qui ne soit ni « forcément » sexualisé ni « forcément » sympathique. Voici donc Tilda, princesse rebelle condamnée à l'exil, guerrière progressiste qui part à la reconquête de son trône, ouvrant dans sa quête un livre légendaire susceptible de bouleverser l'organisation du monde. S'y déploient de solides convictions féministes, à travers une communauté de femmes, égalitaire et forestière, ainsi que le trait enchanteur de Pedrosa, proche de « l'âge d'or » des studios Disney – pour lesquels le dessinateur fut jadis assistant animateur, notamment sur Le Bossu de Notre-Dame (1996) et Hercule (1997). Quelques mois après la sortie du second et dernier volume de son épopée moyenâgeuse, Roxanne Moreil, qui exerce également la profession de libraire à Arles, revient pour L'Arche de Nova sur l'une de ses sources d'inspiration politique : l'Américaine Donna J. Haraway, 76 ans, diplômée de zoologie et de philosophie de l'université du Colorado, dont la pensée éco-féministe peut être rapprochée de celle de Bruno Latour ou de Vinciane Despret, avec lesquels elle dialogue souvent. Notons aussi que ses travaux de référence sur les liens entre féminisme et innovations technologiques (Manifeste Cyborg, 1985) ont permis l'apparition d'un « Docteur Haraway » dans le manga Ghost in the shell. Cherchant des pistes pour d'indispensables « renouvellements mutuels », Roxanne Moreil s'attarde ici en particulier sur Camille, l'un des récits de Vivre avec le trouble de Donna Haraway (2016, traduit aux éditions des Mondes à faire). Au dos, on peut lire : « Vivre avec le trouble, c'est entrer dans un monde étrange — le nôtre — où le temps, sorti de ses gonds, se retrouve ballotté dans un tourbillon de rencontres multispécifiques, d'appropriations violentes, de créations collectives sur fond de désastres climatiques. Un monde où les pensées émanent de symbiotes à corps multiples, visqueux et tentaculaires. Où la Terre est animée de forces aussi puissantes que terrifiantes. Où l'Humain, décomposé en humus, composte avec les autres espèces. »Réalisation : Benoît Thuault.Image : Le Nouveau monde, de Terrence Malick (2006). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The world is a dumpster fire! Today we're talking about what's been helping us get through quarantine, the Anthropocene and the hypocrisy of its hyper-ethics, Black feminist futurity and imagination and environmental racism and the slow violence of redlining, superfund sites, and the water in Flint, MI. We also discuss the value of taking up arms versus taking up community care during and after the revolution, as well as the ethics, politics, and erotics of sharing videos of Black death. Liked what you heard? Donate here! Discussed this week: Blackness and the Pitfalls of Anthropocene Ethics (Axelle Karera, 2019) Staying With the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene (Donna J. Haraway, 2016) How Decades of Racist Housing Policy Left Neighborhoods Sweltering (The New York Times, Brad Plumer and Nadja Popovich, 2020) In the Wake: On Blackness and Being (Christina Sharpe, 2016) Transcript is available on our website here. Be sure to check out the Syllabus for Zora's Daughters 100. Follow us @zorasdaughters on Instagram and @zoras_daughters on Twitter!
Herbs offer all kinds of remedy. Tending a kitchen garden may provide culinary delights and stock for an herbal medicine cabinet, but with additional benefit of peace, solace and hope. Join me in this episode to tour through my 2020 kitchen garden for some delicious and medicinal discoveries. Mentions: Donna J. Haraway: Staying with the Trouble, Making Kin in the Chthulucene Aaron Bertelson: Grow Fruit and Vegetables in Pots Companion Plants Strictly Medicinal Seeds Rootwork Herbals and the People’s Medicine Project Reclamation CONNECT WITH DINA ---** Please join me for my new monthly online group gathering, a kitchen medicine club, a place to grow confidence together! Each month we will have a live discussion that will be hosted on Zoom. With all of my heart I would love you to join me, click here to join on Patreon Together we can transform our kitchens into a unique apothecary.** ---Deepest gratitude to Andrea Klunder, my podcast boss. Find her at thecreativeimposter.com. Original music by Dylan Rice --- Please send me your comments, requests, or feedback. Send me a message, voice or write an email, my email is dina@theherbalbakeshoppe.com. I look forward to hearing from you! To get herb inspired recipes, plant profiles and read more about herbal medicine, visit my website at: theherbalbakeshoppe.com Join me on Patreon Connect with me on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter If you enjoyed this episode, please SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW where ever you like to listen to podcasts! And if you have time, kindly leave me a rating and review. --- ABOUT DINA --- Dina Ranade is a Registered Herbalist with the American Herbalist Guild and a Registered Dietitian/Nutritionist. She is also a mom of three - two daughters and one son all now in college. Dina loves cooking for her family despite the challenges that this creates. She passionately loves exploring culinary herbalism and has been working on stocking her home kitchen apothecary or medicine cabinet.
In this episode, Kim finds out that Saronik gets a little weird when it comes to dogs. We talk about Donna J. Haraway’s book The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness. Haraway studies methods (and practitioners) of agility training in order to try and figure out what these praxes that bring together nature […]
Conversations avec...un article. C'est 10-15 minutes où je rends compte d'un article scientifique récent paru dans une revue en sciences humaines et sociales. Episode 11 : de la mouche au déchet, vie et mort dans les laboratoires scientifiques. L'article original : Tara Mehrabi, "Queer Ecologies of Death in the Lab: Rethinking Waste, Decomposition and Death through a Queerfeminist Lens", Australian Feminist Studies, juin 2020, p. 1‑17. --------- les références mobilisées par l'autrice et implicitement ou explicitement utilisées dans le podcast : Cecilia Åsberg et Jennifer Lum,"Picturizing the Scattered Ontologies of Alzheimer's Disease: Towards a Materialist Feminist Approach to Visual Technoscience Studies", European Journal of Women's Studies, 2010, 17 (4), p. 323–345. Tarsh Bates, "Performance, Bioscience, Care: Exploring Interspecies Alterity", International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2014, 10 (2), p. 216–231. Mary Douglas, De la souillure, Paris, La Découverte, 2005. Donna J. Haraway, Vivre avec le trouble, Les Éditions des mondes à faire, 2020. Catriona Mortimer-Sandilands et Bruce Erickson, Queer Ecologies: Sex, Nature, Politics, Desire, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2010. Marietta Radomska, Uncontainable Life: A Biophilosophy of Bioart. Linköping, Linköping University Electronic Press, 2016. Wibke Straube, "Toxic Bodies: Ticks, Trans Bodies, and the Ethics of Response-Ability in Art and Activist Writing", Environmental Humanities, 2019, 11 (1), p.216–238. --------- Pour aller plus loin : **Sur l'écologie et le vivant** : Roberto Barbanti et Lorraine Vernier (ed.), Les Limites du vivant, Éditions Dehors, 2016. Florence Burgat et Christian Sommer (dir.), Le Phénomène du vivant. Buytendikj et l'anthropologie philosophique, MétisPresses, 2016. Emanuele Coccia, La vie des plantes: Une métaphysique du mélange, Éditions Rivages, 2018. Geremia Cometti et al. (dir.), Au seuil de la forêt. Hommage à Philippe Descola, l'anthropologue de la nature, Totem, 2019. Vinciane Despret, Habiter en oiseau, Éditions Actes Sud, 2019. Nastassja Martin, Croire aux fauves, Editions Gallimard, 2019. Baptiste Morizot, Manières d'être vivant: Enquêtes sur la vie à travers nous, Éditions Actes Sud, 2020. Marin Schaffner, Un sol commun. Lutter, habuter, penser, Éditions Wildproject, 2019. **Sur la théorie queer, le genre et corps** : Maxime Cervulle et Nelly Quemener, "Queer" dans Juliette Rennes (dir.), Encyclopédie critique du genre, La Découverte, 2016. Maxime Cervulle, Nelly Quemener et Florian Vörös, Matérialismes, culture et communication - Tome 2: Cultural Studies, théories féministes et décoloniales., 1ʳᵉ éd. Transvalor - Presses des mines, 2016. Stevi Jackson et Christine Delphy, "Genre, sexualité et hétérosexualité : la complexité (et les limites) de l'hétéronormativité", Nouvelles Questions Feministes, Vol. 34(2), 2015, p. 64‑81. Marietta Radomska, Tara Mehrabi et Nina Lykke, "Queer Death Studies: Death, Dying and Mourning from a Queerfeminist Perspective", Australian Feminist Studies, 35(104), 2020, p. 81‑100. **Sur la vie de laboratoire** : Bruno Latour, Steve Woolgar et Michel Biezunski, La vie de laboratoire, Paris, La Découverte, 2006. **Sur la charogne** : Hicham-Stéphane Afeissa, Esthétique de la charogne, Bellevaux, Dehors, 2018. **Sur l'indétermination** : Gilles Deleuze, Critique et clinique, Éditions de Minuit, 1993. Léna Dormeau, "Pour une épistémologie liminale", Espaces réflexifs, situés, diffractés et enchevêtrés, Adresse : https://reflexivites.hypotheses.org/11594 [Consulté le : 27 juin 2020]. Anne-Sophie Giraud, "Le statut liminal du fœtus mort en France. Du "déchet anatomique" à l'"enfant"", Techniques & Culture. Revue semestrielle d'anthropologie des techniques, (65‑66), 2016, p. 60‑63.
Naz Cuguoğlu is a curator and art writer, based in San Francisco Bay Area and Istanbul. She is the co-founder of “Collective Çukurcuma,” experimenting with collaborative thinking processes through its reading group meetings and international collaborative exhibitions. She currently works as Americas Collection Fellow at KADIST and held various positions at The Wattis Institute, SFMOMA Public Knowledge, Zilberman Gallery, Maumau Art Residency, and Mixer. Her writings have been featured in SFMOMA Open Space, Art Asia Pacific, Hyperallergic, Art South Africa, M-est.org, and elsewhere. She received her BA in Psychology and MA in Social Psychology focusing on cultural studies, and currently enrolled at the Graduate Program in Curatorial Practice at California College of the Arts with a fellowship. Cuguoğlu has curated exhibitions at fused space (San Francisco, 2019), Playspace (San Francisco, 2019), D21 Kunstraum Leipzig (2018), Red Bull Art Around Istanbul (2018), Zilberman Gallery (Istanbul, 2018), Public Program of 15th Istanbul Biennial (2017), Framer Framed (Amsterdam, 2017), Cultural Transit Foundation (Yekaterinburg, 2017), Space Debris (Istanbul, 2017), COOP Gallery (Nashville, 2016), Mixer (Istanbul, 2016), and 5533 (Istanbul, 2015). She co-edited two books: After Alexandria, the Flood and Between Places, and presented at institutions such as Joan Mitchell Foundation, SALT, Norköpping Art Museum, Contemporary Art Center (New Orleans) and Curb Event Center (Nashville). The Book mentioned in the interview is titles Staying With The Trouble by Donna J. Haraway. Istanbul Queer Art Collective’s performance Psychic Bibliophiles, from Flow Out exhibition curated by Collective Çukurcuma at Bilsart (Istanbul, 2019) Collective Çukurcuma Reading Group meeting as part of House of Wisdom exhibition, presented at the public program of the 15th Istanbul Biennial (2015)
Vi samtalar ytterligare om rädsla, kapitalism och bläckfiskar. Demokratiskt? Litteraturtips:Staying with the trouble; Donna J. Haraway (Duke University Press 2016)Dissensus; Jaques Rancinère (Contiuum International Publishing Group 2010)Savannen finns även på www.savannen.nu
This week on The Spectator Film Podcast… Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989) Featuring: Austin, Maxx Commentary track begins at 13:42 — Notes — ‘Anxiety in a Technological World: Tetsuo: The Iron Man’ by Robert Fuoco on Offscreen — Here’s a fun and engaging article that offers a lot of ideas that might be at play throughout the film. Iron Man: The Cinema of Shinya Tsukamoto by Tom Mes ‘A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, And Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century’ by Donna J. Haraway We watched Tetsuo: The Iron Man on Shudder
In this episode Janet & Dave introduce themselves, the podcast, and introduce the first book we'll be reading-- Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene by Donna J. Haraway. (Music by Reanimator) Email us at thebookonfirepodcast@gmail.com [[ Dave & Janet's Radical Vitalism :: Blog :: Instagram :: Website ]]