The series seeks to offer an informal space to share emerging research with interested colleagues in order to gain feedback and to inform collaborative conversations.
This series is co-ordinated by聽Associate Professor Ruth Barcan听补苍诲听Associate Professor Thom van Dooren.
This series was presented in partnership with the School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry online between February and July 2021.
Professor Danielle Celermajer reads from her new book聽Summertime聽and reflects on how we situate ourselves within a climate changing world.
Summertime: Reflections on a Vanishing Future聽鈥 A reading and discussion
In the midst of the black summer fires, Danielle Celermajer began to write about the cataclysm that was unfolding for the multispecies community in which she lived. These seeds of writing became聽聽(Penguin, 2021), a book of creative non-fiction 鈥 a genre that departed from Celermajer鈥檚 scholarly writing on multispecies justice. 聽In this talk, she will reflect on some of the challenges of 鈥榬epresenting鈥 a climate changing world in ways that do not locate it as an object of analysis, but as the living midst that is our shared home. How can writing bring us close into what it feels like and means not only for humans but the beings with whom we live, to experience the violent unravelling of worlds? In this talk, she will read from聽Summertime聽to illustrate how she tried to meet these representational and ethical challenges, not to provide answers, but as a point of departure for conversations we need to have amongst ourselves as scholars living in and deeply concerned about a climate changing world.
Speakers
Danielle Celermajer聽is a Professor of Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Sydney, and Deputy Director 鈥 Academic of the Sydney Environment Institute.聽Her books include聽Sins of the Nation and the Ritual of Apology聽(Cambridge University Press 2009), A Cultural Theory of Law in the Modern Age(Bloomsbury, 2018), and聽聽(Cambridge University Press, 2018).聽Dany is Director of the Multispecies Justice Project and along with her multispecies community, she has recently lived through the NSW fires, writing in the face of their experience of the 鈥渒illing of everything鈥, which she calls 鈥渙mnicide鈥.聽Dany is the Research Lead on聽Concepts and Practices of Multispecies Justice.
Ruth Barcan聽(Chair) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies. Ruth鈥檚 teaching and research focus on embodiment and the senses in everyday life, with a particular interest in everyday practices of sustainability. Ruth is the author of聽聽(Ashgate, 2013),聽Complementary and Alternative Medicine: Bodies, Therapies, Senses聽(Berg, 2011),聽Nudity: A Cultural Anatomy聽(Berg, 2004), and the co-editor of聽Imagining Australian Space: Cultural Studies and Spatial Inquiry聽(UWA Press, 1999) and聽Planet Diana: Cultural Studies and Global Mourning聽(Research Centre in Intercommunal Studies, UWS Nepean, 1997).
Dr Fiona Allon and Dr Scott Webster question the unnatural formation of 鈥渘atural disasters鈥 and the ensuing destruction of homes.
On Fire: Cultural Approaches to Domicide and Australia鈥檚 Fire Regimes
The housing destroyed in recent bushfires is almost always described by the media not as the loss of houses but rather the loss of 鈥渉omes鈥. 鈥淗ome鈥 is an evocative, polysemic concept and hence one mobilised by different political agendas. Reflecting colonial ideas of progress and civilisation, the individual free-standing dwelling was explicitly conceived of as a place 鈥渨here the modern defeats the natural鈥 (Schlunke 2016: 219), a trope that persists into the present as 鈥渢he Australian Dream鈥. Domestication of land similarly was regarded as a means whereby the strange was kept at bay. But how does this imagined geography respond to 鈥渟trange weather鈥: the extreme weather events of climate emergency.
On 8 November 2019, the first day of the bushfire crisis that would subsequently be called 鈥淏lack Summer鈥, Fiona Lee鈥檚 family home on the NSW coast burned to the ground. After hearing politicians repeatedly say that 鈥渘ow is not the time to talk about climate change鈥, Lee staged a protest, depositing the ashes of her house outside the NSW Parliament building. If a house鈥檚 ashes can become the symbolic remains of life and dwelling, does this mean that the home destroyed by bushfire is also a representative site of 鈥渄omicide鈥, the deliberate destruction of home? This paper explores the way in which bushfires challenge our theoretical framework for comprehending home destruction. Porteous and Smith (2001) insist that 鈥渄eliberate intent鈥 is essential for domicide to take place; it is not the outcome of 鈥渘atural disasters鈥. Yet the very idea of 鈥渘atural disaster鈥 remains inadequate as a term of description for the entanglements of the human and natural that are at the heart of a changing climate and its consequences. If time permits, the paper will also consider some of the new relationships between real estate, finance and climate risk management. The financial and real-estate matrix driving the 鈥渟uburbanisation of increasingly inflammable wildlands鈥 (Davis 2017) is also ironically the source of novel forms of insurance finance for responding to the climate change that is increasingly regarded as just another risk to be 鈥渕anaged鈥.
Speakers
Fiona Allon聽is based in the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney. Her research聽areas include home and housing, water and waste, and the politics of everyday environmentalism. She is the author of聽Renovation Nation: Our Obsession with Home聽(UNSW Press) and聽Home Economics: Speculating on Everyday Life聽(forthcoming with Duke University Press). Together with her GCS colleagues Ruth Barcan and Karma Eddison-Cogan, she has recently edited聽The Temporalities of Waste: Out of Sight, Out of Time听(搁辞耻迟濒别诲驳别).
Scott Webster聽was recently awarded his PhD with the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney. His research explores the 鈥榢illing of memory鈥 (or memoricide) as a phenomenon and argues that, beyond its emblematic imagery as part of conflict in Bosnia, Israel and Syria, it also has normalised, everyday dimensions. Scott also has a longstanding interest in the destruction聽of home (鈥榙omicide鈥) and is currently researching how human/nature entanglements complicate our theoretical frameworks for understanding home loss.
Thom van Dooren聽(Chair) is Associate Professor and Australian Research Council Future Fellow (2017-2021) in the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney. His research and writing focus on some of the many philosophical, ethical, cultural, and political issues that arise in the context of species extinctions and human entanglements with threatened species and places. He is the author of聽The Wake of Crows: Living and Dying in Shared Worlds聽(Columbia, 2019), and co-editor of聽Extinction Studies: Stories of Time, Death, and Generations聽(Columbia, 2017).
Researcher Lynne Chester investigates the multitude of intersecting cumulative events, (in)actions and institutions that led to the devastating Australian bushfires.
The Conjunction of Cumulative Events, (In)actions and Institutions Causing and Exacerbating Recent Bushfires and the Aftermath
The unprecedented intensity and duration of the 2019-20 Australian bushfires is a much more complex story than one of climate change, as posited by some. Lynne Chester contends that the scale and catastrophic impact of these bushfires were caused鈥攁nd exacerbated鈥攂y a conjunction of cumulative events, (in)actions and institutions. This story is a potent mix of: the problematisation of bushfires and governing; a federation of nation and local states fractured by constitutional responsibilities; the impact of neoliberal austerity policies on land management; discordant local-state policies; a long-term disregard of Indigenous fire practices; the role of community (volunteerism); the transmission of (mis)information by social and traditional media; record temperatures; national rainfall the lowest for over a century; at least a third of the continent experiencing a severe three-year drought; and more. Lynne聽will outline this potent mix and explore if a similar conjunction could recur given all the recent inquiries.
Speakers
Lynne Chester聽is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Economy and is recognised as a leading Australian scholar in the empirical application of French聽搁茅驳耻濒补迟颈辞苍听theory鈥攁 heterodox (non-conventional) school of economic thought inspired by Marxian and Institutional Economics. Her research has primarily focused on a range of energy issues such as the economic-energy-environment relation, energy justice, household energy affordability, energy problematization, and the economic regulation of energy sectors. More recently, her research has included Australian bushfires, COVID-19 and universities, and an ARC Linkage Project 鈥Solar solutions to improve energy affordability for low-income renters鈥.
Scott Webster聽(Chair)聽was recently awarded his PhD with the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney. His research explores the 鈥榢illing of memory鈥 (or memoricide) as a phenomenon and argues that, beyond its emblematic imagery as part of conflict in Bosnia, Israel and Syria, it also has normalised, everyday dimensions. Scott also has a longstanding interest in the destruction聽of home (鈥榙omicide鈥) and is currently researching how human/nature entanglements complicate our theoretical frameworks for understanding home loss.
Image header: Matt Palmer via Unsplash