ONCURATING

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23 November 2018, 5pm

Talk by Rory Rowan

Contesting Anthropocene Futures


Contesting Anthropocene Futures

In recent years the Anthropocene – the so-called ‘Geological age of man’ – has emerged as a key concept in contemporary thought, moving from its initial home in the earth sciences to grasp the public imagination in a wide range of fields including the arts. Although widely embraced the Anthropocene has also been the subject of fierce critical debate. Much of this discussion has focused on the hotly contested question of the Anthropocene’s historical origins and the bearing this has on questions of responsibility for and vulnerability to anthropogenic environmental change.

This talk turns instead to the question of what futures are imagined to be possible or desirable within the horizon of a planetary scale socio-ecological change. It examines two common tendencies in responses to the challenge of the Anthropocene within contemporary social thought: Neo-Prometheanism and Catastrophic Withdrawal. Neo-Prometheanism places its faith in the promise of techno-fixes and growth detached from environmental impact whilst Castrophic Withdrawalsuggests that a retreat from the delusions of progress is the only way to secure survival on a damaged planet. Whilst the former might be characterized by blind optimism the latter can at times be characterized by an equally blind pessimism, but both however present profoundly depoliticizing responses to environmental crisis and imagine geo-social futures void of politics.

By contrast this talk will argue that imagining more desirable geo-social futures that may also be possible requires locating the political at the heart of our imagination. Hence, it will be argued that facing the challenge of the Anthropocene requires returning to some fundamental questions about how politics is conceived and carried out – what its sites, subjects and aims might be – whilst demands that deeply embedded assumptions about human-nature relations are rethought.

Rory Rowan is a political geographer and cultural critic. His current research focuses on the commercialization of outer space, the political and philosophical dimensions of the Anthropocene and planetary governance. He is author of On Schmitt and Space (with Claudio Minca, Routledge, 2015) and regularly contributes writing on politics, philosophy and cultural criticism to print and online publications as well as working collaboratively with artists and curators. From 2014 to 2017 he was a Lecturer and Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in the Political Geography Research Unit at the University of Zurich and is currently a Guest Lecturer on the MFA Program at the ZHdK.