Art in the
Anthropocene
Conference
in the Long Room Hub,
7 to 9 June 2019
The School for Creative Arts and the “Identities in Transformation” Steering Group invite
you to participate in the conference “Art in the Anthropocene” at Trinity College Dublin from Friday 7 June to Sunday 9 June 2019. The conference is
being organised in collaboration with the Centre for Environmental Humanities,
and the Science Gallery’s exhibition on PLASTIC.
The
Anthropocene has been defined as the present geological epoch in which the
earth’s ecosystems and biodiversity are being slowly disrupted by human
intervention. The term has become commonly used since the beginning of the
twenty-first century when Paul Crutzen argued its importance in a Nature
article, and since then scientists have debated its credibility and possible
starting point, suggesting the end of the eighteenth century (with the birth of
the industrial revolution) or 1945 (with the commencement of nuclear weapons
testing).
The notion
of the Anthropocene raises important questions that concern the sustainability
of the planet. With seas rising and
becoming inexorably acidified and contaminated and the destruction of coral
reefs (such as the Great Barrier Reef); with fish life and plankton dying
because of climate change and pollution from plastic, oil, and other forms of
human waste; with the endangerment and extinction of animal species; with huge
tracts of land in Africa being leased by China to feed its own population; with
African governments encouraging their citizens to go abroad in order to send
back foreign income to sustain their national economies; with aggressive
mining and fracking operations,
fertilization, forest fires, and over-cultivation of land; with the ubiquitous
burning of fossil fuels and the increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere;
with deforestation, drought, desertification, poverty and hunger in the global
south forcing increasing waves of migration; with melting icebergs, periodic oil disasters, and emissions of
radiation from nuclear power plants as well as the continual threat of nuclear
war; and with the rapid increase of the world population to 7 billion
(estimated to increase to 10 billion by 2050), Elon Musk has offered a wake-up
call by proposing that we need to colonize Mars.
Posthumanism
has offered an alternative to anthropocentrism and emphasised the importance of
the non-human in the challenge against the destructive effects of the
Anthropocene. Posthumanism privileges animals, plant life, ecological systems
and the environment, as well as providing a feminist perspective on human
patriarchy. It emphasizes the protection and conservation of the earth and its
inhabitants, recognizing continuity between all living creatures including
plants, animals and humans. New trends in philosophy offer new materialism,
object-oriented ontologies, and theories of social assemblage. As art is more
sensitive in reacting to the issue of the Anthropocene, we encourage papers on
Visual art, theatre, performance, film, and new media related to such topics
as:
- Artistic Activism
- Animals and Art
- Artificial intelligence and art
- Art and Ecology
- Art and the figure of the Refugee
- Bioart and Microbial art
- Non-human gaze
- Plastic art
- Object-Oriented art
- Rethinking indigenous cosmologies
- Posthumanist ethics
Please send
a 250 word abstract of your proposed paper with a brief biography to Professor Steve Wilmer, swilmer@tcd.ie by 15 January 2019. Responses will be given by 31
January 2019.
The
conference will precede a major exhibition on PLASTIC at Trinity College’s Science Gallery in June 2019. Keynote speakers will include Cary Wolfe, author
of What is Posthumanism? (U Minn Press, 2010), Before the Law: Humans and Other
Animals in a Biopolitical Frame (Chicago UP, 2012), and the forthcoming Art and
Posthumanism (U. Minn Press, 2019). It is intended that selected papers given at
the conference will be developed as chapters for a book. The conference fee of
€120 will cover panels, plenary sessions, keynote speakers, coffee and lunch
during breaks and a conference dinner.
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