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Tag Archives: climate change

Mobilizing for Justice in the Anthropocene: Autogestion, Radical Politics, and the Owl of Minerva (2/2)

September 18, 2014by Arran Crawford Leave a comment

Originally posted on Notes toward an International Libertarian Eco-Socialism:
  [This is part II of an interview on Grabbing Back: Essays Against the Global Land Grab (AK Press, 2014). Read…

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politics

Pop Nihilism and The Dust Of This Planet

September 17, 2014by ||| 10 Comments

From RADIO LAB:  A conversation with Eugene Thacker on the truth, beauty and post-goodness of pessimism (nihilism?) Eugene Thacker is an author and associate professor at The New School in […]

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Uncategorized

Transformation without Apocalypse (?) Rob Nixon

September 16, 2014by dmf Leave a comment

Rob’s talk starts around 6:55 if like me you can do without the pipedreamer intro See also: Slow Violence and The Environmentalism of the Poor Transformation Without Apocalypse: How to Live […]

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Nixon

Vanishing World, Climate Refugees – Marianne Hougen-Moraga

September 15, 2014by dmf 1 Comment

See Also: http://ecowatch.com/2014/09/11/vanishing-world-climate-refugees/ heartbreaking

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Uncategorized

Naomi Klein is half right…

September 14, 2014by dmf Leave a comment

Here in this interview she rightly characterizes our escalating human-global-heating-mass-death as “an existential crisis for the human species, a clear and present danger to civilization, a death sentence for the […]

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Klein

On Guattari’s Planetary Psychopathology – Stanimir Panayotov

August 21, 2014by dmf 2 Comments

https://www.academia.edu/1255122/On_Guattaris_Planetary_Psychopathology Planetary psychopathology is a term used by Guattari in an Italian-published text from the early80s (Guatari 1984). Psychopathology is the science that studies the mental disorders of human beings. […]

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Berardi, Guattari

Living in Ruins, Anna Tsing

June 5, 2014by dmf 4 Comments

PART ONE (OF 4) – go to YouTube for the rest   UC Santa Cruz anthropologist Anna Tsing is one of six international scholars to win a $5 million Niels Bohr Professorship […]

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Tsing

Agonism, Pluralism, and Contemporary Capitalism

February 25, 2014by ||| 4 Comments

An Interview with William E. Connolly William E. Connolly is a political theorist known for his work on democracy and pluralism and Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Political Science at Johns Hopkins […]

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Connolly

Sex in the (Anthropocene) City

July 1, 2013by dmf Leave a comment

Claire Colebrook is the Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English at Penn State University, and author of 11 books and numerous articles on Ethics, Deleuze, Milton, Evil in literary history […]

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Colebrook

An Economic Ethics for the Anthropocene

June 18, 2013by dmf 4 Comments

In the video below Katherine Gibson (one half of the amazing JK Gibson-Graham feminist economic-geographer duo; unfortunately Julie Graham died in 2010) delivers a powerful and insightful plenary lecture entitled, […]

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K. Gibson, Latour, Rabinow

The possibility of hope: a short film about no future

June 13, 2013by Arran Crawford 2 Comments

The Possibility of Hope is a short 2007 documentary that accompanied the home release of the brilliant film Children of Men (a film that only becomes more pertinent) focussing on […]

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Gray, Klein, Lovelock, Sassen, Todorov, Zizek

Timothy Clark – Derangements of Scale

May 27, 2013by dmf Leave a comment

“When we observe the environment, we necessarily do so only on a limited range of scales; therefore our perception of events provides us with only a low-dimensional slice through a […]

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Derrida, Heidegger

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||| on Deterritorializing the Future?
ramonelani on The Way Of The Violent Stars (…
||| on The Way Of The Violent Stars (…
ramonelani on The Way Of The Violent Stars (…
Mario Savioni on Deterritorializing the Future?
||| on Deterritorializing the Future?
Mario Savioni on Deterritorializing the Future?
Mario Savioni on Resisting the Coming Barbarism
thefreeonline on Anthropocene Hubris
||| on UNCIVILISATION: THE DARK MOUNT…
||| on Pandaemic Speculations: A Mult…
landzek on UNCIVILISATION: THE DARK MOUNT…

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  • RT @gindaanis: Land Back isn't that hard. Only 11% of land in Canada is privately owned. 41% is federal, 48% is provincial. So 89% of the… 4 hours ago
  • RT @UrbanTheoryLab: Mumford and metabolic rift--urbanization and the transformation of the earth. Full lecture from earlier this term (Cit… 4 hours ago
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