Keyword: Deep Time
- projectKatrin Klingan, Georg N. Schäfer, Giulia Bruno, Simon Turner, Armin Linke, Niklas Hoffmann-Walbeck, J. Rowan Deer
Geology of the Present Publication
The transition from the Holocene to the Anthropocene is turning geology into a social science. Researchers and artists grapple with stratigraphic materials and the challenges of in planetary knowledge production.
Archiving, Conversation, Storytelling, Consensus Building, Care, Climate change, Future, Human-environment relations, Stratigraphy, Knowledge production, Knowledge transformation, Deep time
- projectChristoph Rosol, Giulia Rispoli, Katrin Klingan, Anna Echterhölter, Nigel Clark, Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, Desiree Foerster, Myriel Milićević, Karolina Sobecka, Alexandra Toland, Clemens Winkler, Kat Austen, Kristine L. DeLong, Jens Zinke, Victor Galaz, Simon Turner, Susan Schuppli, Liz Thomas, Niklas Hoffmann-Walbeck
Evidence Ensembles Publication
Conversation, Archiving, Sensing, Intervention, Consensus, Critical materials, Deep time, Knowledge infrastructure, Stratigraphy, Sedimentation, Complexity
- contributionArmin Linke, Giulia Bruno
Earth Indices
An in progress digital publication resulting from the artistic installation presented at HKW by Giulia Bruno and Armin Linke with the scientists of the AWG.
Archiving, Conversation, Field Work, Engagement, Experiment, Data, Stratigraphy, Deep time, Holocene
- contributionSusan Schuppli, Liz Thomas
Exchange on Melting Narrations
How can we mediate and embed scientific findings into new narrations? And what contingency, what order, will these narrations have?
Conversation, Engagement, Climate change, Deep time, Water, Ocean
- contributionJamie Allen, Irka Hajdas
Exchange On Deep Time And Deep Responseability
How do the geochronologists and geohistorians understand their response-ability to material signals from the past?
Conversation, Reflection, Stratigraphy, Time, Deep time, Agency
- contributionVictor Galaz, Cymene Howe, Liz Thomas, Ricarda Winkelmann
Clashing Presents: Between Big Melt and Small Governance
Which temporal immediacies and horizons do new forms of collectives, connected through a rising global ocean, need to coalesce?
Conversation, Reflection, Consensus, Stratigraphy, Deep time, Time, Policy
- contributionOrit Halpern, Stephen Himson, Sophia Roosth, Mark Williams, Matthew C. Wilson
Clashing Presents: Memory and Oblivion in Times of Extinction
Exploring the accelerating processes and cumulative events of species extinction by examining biotic changes in the sediments of the San Francisco Bay.
Conversation, Reflection, Extinction, Species, Deep time, Time, Biodiversity
- contributionBernadette Bensaude-Vincent, Andrea Borsato, Ann Cotten, Nigel Clark, Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
Clashing Presents: Reconciling Presents
A conversation that takes the stratigraphic research in Ernesto Cave, Italy, as a starting point for exploring how we might conceive a truly planetary time.
Conversation, Reflection, Stratigraphy, Time, Deep time, Water, Data
- contributionAnthony D. Barnosky, Elizabeth A. Hadly, Allison Stegner
How to Read a Changing Earth?
A live annotation of a sediment core from the Searsville Lake uncovered the anthropogenic markers inscribed into this stratigraphic material.
Archiving, Conversation, Field Work, Deep time, Stratigraphy, Data, Holocene, Sedimentation, Water
- contributionOliver Sann, Beate Geissler
Fragments from the White Angst Cli-Fi Read-Along
Recording of a live, read-along event presenting a collage of writing by climate fiction authors from all over the world.
Storytelling, Engagement, Climate change, Deep time
- project
Unearthing the Present
What is the new geological epoch made of? Unearthing the Present connected the geological analysis of the present with a discussion of the changing scope for social and political agency.
Conversation, Case Study, Field Work, Experiment, Monitoring, Agency, Anthropos, Biosphere, Carbon, Climate change, Data, Deep time, Extraction, Ocean, Radioactivity, Sedimentation, Stratigraphy
- event
Core Readings
For the opening night of Unearthing the Present, scientists, researchers and artists undertake a series of close readings in the stratigraphic archives of the Anthropocene.
Conversation, Engagement, Field Work, Stratigraphy, Sedimentation, Holocene, Deep time
- event
Anthropocene Working Group. A Scientific Forum
During Unearthing the Present, the Anthropocene Working Group (AWG) will present the conclusive stratigraphic findings from twelve sites that hold the potential to become a GSSP for the formal demarcation of the Anthropocene.
Case Study, Consensus Building, Conversation, Stratigraphy, Holocene, Deep time, Landscape, Ocean, Data, Sedimentation
- event
Clashing Presents
Exploring the competing time horizons, latency effects and accelerations that run counter to the pulse of late-Holocene societies.
Conversation, Extinction, Deep time, Time, Holocene, System, Biosphere, Stratigraphy, Governance
- event
Earth Indices
An exhibition by artists Giulia Bruno and Armin Linke explores the scientific and social conditions producing the new geological epoch, the Anthropocene.
Archiving, Intervention, Field Work, Data, Stratigraphy, Deep time, Holocene, Sedimentation
- contributionBenjamin Johnson
Closed Chemical Cycles
It’s possible that the most suitable golden spike for marking the beginning of the Anthropocene does not yet exist.
Reflection, Carbon, Energy, Deep time, Economy, Engineering, Future, Governance, System
- contributionMark Williams, Francine M.G. McCarthy, Alejandro Cearreta, Martin J. Head, Reinhold Leinfelder, Jens Zinke, Anthony D. Barnosky, Kristine L. DeLong
Biological and Paleontological Signatures of the Anthropocene
Lakes, seas, estuaries, and wetlands provide important archives of humanity’s reconfiguration of life in the Anthropocene.
Field Work, Biosphere, Deep time, Extinction, Evolution, History, Scale, Stratigraphy, Future
- contributionJulian Charrière
Weight of Shadows
The artist Julian Charrière artificially remodels a biogeochemical cycle and casts it into a performance of reverse extraction: carbon molecules are captured from the air and turned into diamonds which are then “wastefully” cast into a glacier.
Intervention, Aesthetics, Carbon, Commodities, Deep time, Extraction, Technoscience
- contributionIan Fairchild, Alejandro Cearreta, Colin Summerhayes, Agnieszka Gałuszka, Michael Wagreich
The Anthropocene Signal Amidst the Noise
Field Work, Deep time, Future, Scale, Stratigraphy
- contributionJürgen Renn, Nathaniel LaCelle-Peterson
Traces and Symptoms
What kind of sign is a marker? Jürgen Renn and Nathaniel LaCelle-Peterson sketch the dual role of markers as traces in the strata and symptoms of a destabilized Earth System—an interface between natural archives and human societies.
Reflection, Deep time, Consensus, Epistemology, Disciplinarity, Knowledge transformation, Stratigraphy, System
- contributionNina Canell and Robin Watkins
Silurian Harvest
Artists Nina Canell and Robin Watkins recover the deep-time aquatic past of the limestone environment that formed the island of Gotland and delineate the temporal entanglements between ancient life creation and modern-day living.
Sensing, Field Work, Aesthetics, Critical materials, Deep time, Degradation, Future, Economy, History, Human-environment relations, Sedimentation
- contributionAndrea Westermann
Against the Aestheticization of Technofossils
Plastic represents a particularly alluring material legacy in the rock record—but as Andrea Westermann shows, for its health and environmental hazards, consumerism and the exploitation of migrant labor, plastic is a deeply troubling material.
Storytelling, Aesthetics, Commodities, Critical materials, Deep time, Pollution, Migration, Environmental Justice
- contributionJan Zalasiewicz, Peter K. Haff, Matt Edgeworth, Juliana A. Ivar do Sul, Daniel Richter
The Technofossil Record: Where Archaeology and Paleontology Meet
Field Work, Commodities, Deep time, Engineering, Scale, Stratigraphy, Technosphere
- contributionChristoph Rosol
A Mid-Twentieth Century Start Date for Anthropocene Geology
Christoph Rosol sketches out the marriage of paleoceanography with isotope chemistry in the middle of the twentieth century, part of a synchronism between the onset of the Anthropocene and the emergence of the technical means of understanding it.
Storytelling, Deep time, Ecology, Disciplinarity, Human-environment relations, Knowledge transformation, Stratigraphy, History, Technoscience
- contributionYongming Han, J.R. McNeill, Neil L. Rose, Simon Turner
Combustion Products as Markers for the Anthropocene
Field Work, Carbon, Deep time, Future, Scale, Stratigraphy, Thermodynamics
- contributionAgnieszka Gałuszka, Neil L. Rose, Andy Cundy, Michael Wagreich, Yongming Han, Simon Turner, William Shotyk
Anthropogenic Threats to Ecosystems in the Anthropocene
Field Work, Biosphere, Deep time, Degradation, Ecology, Future, Stratigraphy, Scale, Species
- contributionSebastián Ureta
Tailings and the Onset of a Chilean Anthropocene
Sebastián Ureta gives a thick description of Anthropocene landscapes where vast, stratified dumps of chemical residues that largely outlive their creators.
Mapping, Critical materials, Deep time, Degradation, Disaster, Environmental Justice, Mining, Policy, Waste
- contributionCristián Simonetti, Matt Edgeworth
Concrete: A Stratigraphic Marker for the Anthropocene
We are live in the venerable International Court of Stratigraphic Arbitration, and on trial is the question whether concrete, the unparalleled material, is indeed an admissible marker for defining the onset of the Anthropocene.
Critical materials, Deep time, Future, Infrastructure, Stratigraphy, Urbanism
- contributionMarcia Bjornerud
Ironies of the Anthropocene
Faced with the Anthropocene, Marcia Bjornerud sees a set of grave ironies at play that make it hard for any geologist to capture its real meaning. We can only acknowledge these ironies and use them wisely to restore a lost alliance with the Earth.
Anthropos, Deep time, Extinction, Extraction, Stratigraphy, Affect
- contributionAndy Cundy, Colin Waters, Irka Hajdas, Yoshiki Saito
Radioactive Fallout as a Marker for the Anthropocene
Field Work, Radioactivity, Critical materials, Deep time, Disaster, Scale, Risk
- contributionCatherine Russell
Active Archives
Catherine Russell invites us into the University of Leicester geology archive and proposes that archives are teeming with potential for new understandings.
Archiving, Teaching, Storytelling, Conversation, Landscape, Deep time, History, Knowledge infrastructure
- contributionThomas Turnbull
Driving the Limits of Time
How acknowledging and engaging with complex temporal clashes can generate coherent responses to the seemingly totalizing notion of the Anthropocene.
Reflection, Conversation, Engagement, Field Work, Deep time, History, Human-environment relations, Slavery, Carbon, Time
- contributionSara Black, Amber Ginsburg
Deep Time Walking
A reflection on the collision of human and geological time at the site of Ferne Clyff State Park, Illinois.
Field Work, Deep time, Carbon, Energy
- Field Notesimon.turner
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London, United Kingdom
Storytelling, Field Study, Field Work, Experiment, Deep time, Erosion, Flood, History, Human-environment relations, Imaginary, Landscape, Sedimentation
- contributionAndrew Gustin, Temporary continent.
Enter Anthropocene: Searching for signal in New Orleans
Despite this quest to identify a formally recognized boundary, perhaps uncertainty is the most effective means of furthering societal recognition of the complexities of human impact.
Conversation, Reflection, Field Work, Stratigraphy, Deep time, Complexity, Human-environment relations, Sedimentation
- Field Notemira.witte_admin
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Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, USA
Field Study, Deep time, Erosion, Landscape, Sedimentation, Sand, Mud, Clay
- Field Notes.kanouse
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New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Storytelling, Intervention, Conversation, Agency, Care, Deep time, Evolution, Life, Resilience, Race, Environmental Justice, Cosmologies, Women, Maternal deep time
- Field Noteayse
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New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Storytelling, Reflection, Teaching, Intervention, Conversation, Anthropology, Anthropos, Capitalism, Commodities, Complexity, Deep time, Energy, Mining, Scale, Extraction, Oil, 2019, Geo-ecologies, Time
- Field Notebsteininger
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Plaquemine Island, Louisiana, USA
Storytelling, Field Work, Complexity, Deep time, Infrastructure, Landscape, Metabolism, Oil, refinery, Catalysis
- Field Notetemporarycontinent"...because I’m from New Orleans, brother. Our main focus is to move ahead and move on. You guys are not from New Orleans and keep throwing it in our face, like, ‘Well, how do you feel about Hurricane Katrina?’ I f—king feel f—ked up. I have no f—king city or home to go to. My mother has no home, her people have no home, and their people have no home. Every f—king body has no home. So do I want to dedicate something to Hurricane Katrina? Yeah, tell that b—h to suck my d—k. That is my dedication." — Lil Wayne
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New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Storytelling, Deep time, History, Resilience, Lil Wayne
- Field Noteslewison
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Middle Ground Island, Mississippi, USA
Contingency, Deep time, Flood
- Field Notetemporarycontinent
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Carbondale, Illinois, USA
Carbon, Climate change, Deep time, Energy, Erosion, Mining, Sedimentation, Seismic, Glaciation, Extraction
- Field Notes.kanouse
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Readstown, Wisconsin, USA
Sensing, Field Work, Deep time
- Field Notetemporarycontinent
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Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Anthropos, Architecture, Deep time, Ecology, Engineering, Extinction, Infrastructure, Settler Colonialism, Indigenous Rights, Dakota, Fieldstation, Colonialism, Temporary Continent, 2019, Andrea Carlson
- contributionLynn Peemoeller, Gayle Fritz
The Interpretive Garden at the Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site
A project output by Postnatural Landscapes Project with an animation.
Film, Field Study, Storytelling, Aesthetics, Agriculture, Anthropology, Deep time, Engagement, Food
- contributionColin Waters
The Mississippi River Provides Insights into the World of More than 300 Million Years Ago
“Some 300 billion metric tons of coal has been mined globally during the Anthropocene.” An excursion into the orginis of coal by geologist Colin Waters
Scale, Deep time, Time, Spatial, Mining, Carbon
- projectLynn Peemoeller
Postnatural Landscapes
Ancient agricultural practices in the American Bottom were significant in the shaping of the landscapes and foodscapes that exist today.
Field Work, Case Study, Landscape, Deep time, History, Anthropology, Agriculture, Evolution, Food
- projectSarah Lewison, Claire Pentecost, Kayla Anderson, Sara Black, Amber Ginsburg
Inheritance
A multimedia artwork that uncovers the sublime beauty of fossilized forests.
Field Study, Sensing, Carbon, Deep time, Mining, Water
- contributionAndrew Yang
Deep Time Chicago
Andrew Yang speaks about his involvement with the art/research/activism initiative Deep Time Chicago which endeavors to develop a public research trajectory on Anthropocene questions.
Reflection, Embodiment, Deep time, Spatial, Climate change
- contributionJennifer Colten, Jesse Vogler
Significant and Insignificant Mounds: an Essay
Deciphering the cosmology of artificial hills—from the Cahokia Mounds to the slag heaps of today.
Storytelling, Landscape, Deep time, History, Local knowledge, Anthropology, Colonialism
- projectRobert N. Spengler, Natalie Mueller
Ancient Bison Herds of the American Midwest and the Domestication of the Lost Crops
How did the ancestors of early agricultural crops spread across space? A research project on the influence of animals on human farming practices.
Field Work, Human-animal relations, Deep time, Agriculture, Landscape, History, Biodiversity
- contributionJan Zalasiewicz, Colin Waters, Mark Williams, Catherine Russell
The Four-Dimensional Mississippi
How did the Mississippi River become both cause and register of anthropocenic changes and what do these changes reveal about the Mississippi’s future?
Reflection, Deep time, Time, History, Topology, Sedimentation, Water, Climate change
- contributionNatalie Mueller
Understanding the North American Lost Crops
Which kind of ancient crops were cultivated by prehistoric civilizations in eastern North America? Archaeologist Natalie Mueller pursues this question in her research on “lost crops”
Field Study, Agriculture, Deep time, History, Human-environment relations
- contributionLynn Peemoeller
Eating the Anthropocene
How can we encounter ourselves in the Anthropocene? A study in the deconstruction of cows and an introduction to “The Lost Crops of America” project.
Field Study, Extinction, Biodiversity, Agriculture, Human-animal relations, Human-environment relations, Socio-ecological design, History, Deep time, Metabolism, Landscape, Food
- contributionJennifer Colten, Jesse Vogler
Significant and Insignificant Mounds: Presentation
What can the mounds of North America—from temples to landfills—tell us about the history of settlement and the anthropogenic condition we inhabit today?
Reflection, Field Study, Deep time, History, Urbanism, Landscape, Epistemology
- projectAmy Lesen, Catherine Russell, Bruce Sunpie Barnes, Scott Wing
Seminar: Clashing Temporalities
This seminar brings concepts of time, layers, and sediment into close contact with the human sciences, the arts, and Pierre Part, a community who live according to the movements of the River.
Case Study, Teaching, Time, Deep time, Adaptation, Agriculture, Biosphere, Evolution, Metabolism, Human-environment relations, Water, Waste, History, Sedimentation, Erosion
- projectMichael Allen, Jennifer Colten, Matthew Fluharty, Gavin Kroeber, Natalie Mueller, Lynn Peemoeller, Robert N. Spengler, William Taylor, Jesse Vogler
Midway Meeting St. Louis
At the “Midway Meeting” in St. Louis, project partners gathered to explore the temporal and topographical multiplicitices of the metropolitcan region of St. Louis.
Field Study, Reflection, Storytelling, Teaching, Deep time, History, Climate change, Ecology, Urbanism, Infrastructure, Engagement, Anthropology
- projectJennifer Colten, Jesse Vogler
Significant and Insignificant Mounds
Significant and Insignificant Mounds looks to read two landscapes across one another in order to complicate our understandings of authenticity, meaning, and form.
Case Study, Storytelling, Reflection, Deep time, History, Time, Anthropology, Landscape, Urbanism, Epistemology, Knowledge transformation, Knowledge infrastructure
- projectJennifer Colten, Matthew Fluharty, Derek Hoeferlin, Gavin Kroeber, James McAnally, Lynn Peemoeller, Treasure Shields Redmond, Jesse Vogler, Natalie Mueller
Field Station 3: Anthropocene Vernacular
In the St. Louis region, memories and meanings of millennia of settlement collide. Anthropocene Vernacular investigates how everyday culture has been cultivated in the midst of social, environmental, economic crises.
Field Study, Field Work, Storytelling, Water, Infrastructure, Urbanism, Deep time, Time, History, Anthropology, Local knowledge, Capitalism, Human-animal relations, Human-environment relations, Agriculture, Epistemology, Environmental Justice, Industrialization
- event
Field Station 2 | Walking and Learning the Land
The third day of the seminar heads outdoors to explore the landscape on foot and to consider the ways of knowing that such embodied inquiry allows.
Case Study, Storytelling, Deep time, History, Equality, Agency, Landscape, Agriculture, Settler Colonialism, Knowledge infrastructure, Care
- projectKatrin Klingan, Christoph Rosol, Bernd M. Scherer, Peter K. Haff, Jürgen Renn, Bronislaw Szerszynski, John Tresch, Luciana Parisi, Louis Chude-Sokei, Esther Leslie, Kathryn Yusoff, Rosi Braidotti, Oscar Guardiola-Rivera, Lydia H. Liu, Alexander Ilichevsky
Technosphäre Publication
The German publication Technosphäre collects contributions thinking through the conditions and evolution of this new Earth system player. Included here are two selections from the book in English translation: the editorial introduction and a conversation between Peter K. Haff and Jürgen Renn.
Conversation, Mapping, Storytelling, Communicating, Adaptation, Calculation, Complexity, Computation, Critical materials, Deep time, Technosphere, Future, Disciplinarity, Knowledge infrastructure
- contributionRyan Griffis
A Great Green Desert
Ryan Griffis’ pamphlet in the Deep Time Chicago series traces the networks, economies, and monochrome landscapes of US agribusiness.
Case Study, Field Work, Reflection, Deep time, Agriculture, Plantation
- contributionOliver Sann, Ellie Tse, Julia Sharpe, Shawn Michelle Smith, Viviana de la Rosa, Jenny Magnus, Evan Graham, Guanyu Xu
In Search of Freedom in the Anthropocene
The arrival of the Anthropocene coincides with the era of political demands for “universal freedom,” as defined by Western philosophers. But whose freedom is this?
Conversation, Teaching, Reflection, Deep time, Modernity, Environmental Justice
- contributionAndrew Yang
Time (and time again)
How does the concept of the Anthropocene help to re-evaluate human and non-human agency across sub-disciplines of history?
Conversation, Deep time, History, Time
- contributionCaroline Picard
Bound with Bright Beautiful Things
A consideration of human exceptionalism that draws inspiration from Panchatantra, the famous collection of animal fables.
Storytelling, Deep time, Human-animal relations, Cosmologies, Wisdom
- projectBrian Holmes, Jeremy Bolen, Caroline Picard, Oliver Sann, Andrew Yang, Lorraine Daston, Ryan Griffis, Evan Graham, Jenny Magnus, Viviana de la Rosa, Julia Sharpe, Shawn Michelle Smith, Ellie Tse, Guanyu Xu
Deep Time Chicago Pamphlet Series
Deep Time Chicago’ pamphlets delve into the problems, paradoxes and potentials of human and non-human life in a rapidly destabilizing ecosystem.
Case Study, Conversation, Field Work, Deep time, Education, Knowledge production, Stratigraphy, History, Agriculture, Human-animal relations, Human-environment relations
- project
Deep Time Chicago 2016–
Deep Time Chicago explores the idea of humanity as a geological agency, capable of disrupting the Earth system and inscribing present modes of existence into deep time.
Conversation, Reflection, Deep time, Ecology
- contributionJeremy Bolen, Brian Holmes, Andrew Yang
Walk About It
This event series by Deep Time Chicago aims for a scientific and artistic approach to nature which is based on lived experiece.
Field Work, Deep time, Spatial, Landscape, Human-environment relations, Urban
- contributionCaroline Picard, Andrew Yang, Emily Eliza Scott, Jeremy Bolen
The Aesthetic Origins of the Anthropocene
Given the importance of the “start” for the entire Anthropocene narrative, we should consider an aesthetic approach to the question.
Conversation, Reflection, Aesthetics, Affect, Deep time
- contributionChristopher Reznich
13,000 Years of Messing Around with the Holocene
From mega-fauna extinction to atombic bomb: mapping the history of anthropogenic transformations of Earth.
Naturecultures, Deep time, Extinction
- contributionRohini Devasher
Deep Time
What drives amateur astronomers? Artist Rohini Devasher on the power of projection.
Mapping, Human-environment relations, Deep time
- projectPeter L. Galison, Sander van der Leeuw, Claire Pentecost, Sebastian Vehlken
The Scenario Mode
The scenario has become a mode of knowledge of the first order. In fact, “running in scenario mode” seems to be the way in which contemporary existence, through the vision of this exploratory practice and tool, exemplifies learning and researching in and on the Anthropocene itself. This evening deals with the trans-methodical arrangement of scenario building and analysis and its specific formatting through institutional and media-based infrastructures.
Communicating, Film, Storytelling, Teaching, Engagement, Adaptation, Big data, Calculation, Complexity, Contingency, Computation, Deep time, Disaster, Governance, Games, Policy, Radioactivity, Scenario, Waste
- contributionBrian Holmes
Driving the Golden Spike—The Aesthetics of Anthropocene Public Space
This micro-publication looks at the city of Chicago as a site of origin for materials, particles, and social relations that define the new geological epoch of the Anthropocene.
Field Study, Reflection, Deep time, Spatial, Aesthetics, Technosphere, Metabolism, Urban
- contributionKatrin Klingan, Christoph Rosol
A Curriculum for the Anthropocene
Scale, metabolism, sensing, agency—this publication introduces some of the concepts essential to the interdisciplinary debate around the Anthropocene.
Teaching, Deep time, glossary
- projectRana Dasgupta, S. Løchlann Jain, Clapperton C. Mavhunga, Matteo Pasquinelli, Lucy Suchman
Trauma: The Language of the Technosphere
How is the technosphere inscribed into individual human bodies? How are they restructured along a complex machinery of instruments, techniques, simulations?
Communicating, Engagement, Intervention, Monitoring, Storytelling, Teaching, Adaptation, Care, Anthropos, Anthropology, Cosmologies, Deep time, Embodiment, Education, Calculation, Future, Imaginary, Inequality, Settler Colonialism, Technosphere
- contributionAndrew Yang
a n t h r o p o z i n e # 0
“Are we in the Anthropocene?” This publication documents a series of interviews with participants from the Anthropocene Campus in 2014 at Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW).
Reflection, Deep time, History