English & Comparative Literary Studies - Events Calendar
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
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CRITICAL ENVIRONMENTS - A talk by Anne-Lise FrançoisRamphal Building - room R03.04CRITICAL ENVIRONMENTS (Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies) presents: A talk by Anne-Lise François (UC Berkeley Departments of English and Comparative Literary Studies). "Climate Change and the Cumulus of History" TALK DESCRIPTION: The 'cumulus of history' of my title refers simultaneously to two radically different temporal frameworks--that of the long-term accumulation of greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere contributing to anthropogenic climate change, and that of the half-hour span of the cumulus cloud of Luke Howard’s nomenclature. As the accelerated pace of climate change now seems to collapse even the distinction between weather and climate, what insights can be gleaned from the juxtaposition of disjunctive temporal phenomena--the fugitive time of Constable’s cloud-studies and the enduring time of accumulated CO2s? Examining the role that economies of storage and accumulation have played in bringing us to this ecological crisis, the paper then asks about what lessons might be learned from methods of observation such as Constable’s--methods determined by the essentially transitory, time-bound, metamorphic and non-repeatable character of their objects. The paper also compares different accounts of the weather and seasonal change, contrasting those documented in the indigenous-rights project Conversations with the Earth with those of the climate-controlled laboratory.
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