17 episodes

Join photographer Peter Holliday in conversation with a range of guests as he explores questions relating to photography, perception and place.

Support the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind

The Land Behind: Conversations on Photography, Perception and Place Peter Holliday

    • Arts

Join photographer Peter Holliday in conversation with a range of guests as he explores questions relating to photography, perception and place.

Support the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind

    17. Ted Toadvine: Deep Time, the Anthropocene Debate and Eco-Phenomenology

    17. Ted Toadvine: Deep Time, the Anthropocene Debate and Eco-Phenomenology

    Peter speaks to the philosopher Ted Toadvine about a wide range of environmental themes and issues. Toadvine specialises in environmental ethics and contemporary European philosophy. His new book titled The Memory of the World: Deep Time, Animality, and Eschatology explores the ethical and ecological implications of deep time from a phenomenological perspective and is available now via University of Minnesota Press.



    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thelandbehindpodcast



    Timestamps:

    (00:00) Introduction

    (02:44) Episode begins

    (09:57) Why Toadvine wrote The Memory of the World

    (16:56) Toadvine’s earliest experiences of deep time

    (23:27) Reconciling humanity and the natural environment

    (40:57) Technology and nature

    (46:00) The problem with the Anthropocene

    (58:10) The problem with biodiversity

    (01:05:52) The relationship between nature and language

    (01:10:12) What is eco-phenomenology?

    (01:15:10) Nature as the horizon of all things

    (01:20:07) “Nature loves to hide”

    (01:26:08) Edmund Husserl’s description of the natural world as a “correlate of consciousness”

    (01:31:48) “The sun did not exist before human beings”

    (01:42:45) The ethical problems of global sustainability

    (01:52:23) The relationship between deep time and embodiment

    (02:03:43) The animals that haunt our humanity from within

    (02:20:38) Derrida at the end of the world

    (02:29:06) The cultural obsession with doomsday

    (02:36:39) The phenomenological perspective of the end of the world

    (02:47:20) A phenomenology of the elements

    (02:52:04) Art and the elements

    • 3 hrs 5 min
    16. Alphonso Lingis: On Seeing, the Face and the Phenomenology of Maurice Merleau-Ponty

    16. Alphonso Lingis: On Seeing, the Face and the Phenomenology of Maurice Merleau-Ponty

    Peter speaks to the philosopher Al Lingis about what we can learn by looking and the ethics of seeing. Described as one of the most original voices alive today in American philosophy, Al is a keen photographer, and many of his essays are accompanied by his own images. During the episode Al describes the significance of photography to the development of his own philosophical thinking.


    Listen to the full episode by supporting the podcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind



    (32.00)

    • 52 min
    15. Harri Pälviranta: Post-Documentary, Aftermath Photography and Dark Tourism

    15. Harri Pälviranta: Post-Documentary, Aftermath Photography and Dark Tourism

    Peter joins the Helsinki-based photographer and researcher Harri Pälviranta at his studio to discuss the various themes behind his artistic practice, much of which has been dedicated to making visible structures of violence and issues of masculinity. His recent photobook titled Wall Tourist, published by Kult Books in 2022, contains a series of self-critical portraits exposed against the international boundaries of state power that question the role of the travelling photographer in the creation of the documentary image.

    https://harripalviranta.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/harri_palviranta/

    Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind

    • 1 hr 12 min
    14. Tim Carpenter: To Photograph is to Learn How to Die

    14. Tim Carpenter: To Photograph is to Learn How to Die

    Peter speaks to the American photographer and writer Tim Carpenter about the "existential conundrum" of being a photographer, as explored in Tim's new book-length essay titled ‘To Photograph is to Learn How to Die’, published in 2023 by The Ice Plant. Their conversation is a discussion about the photographic life and how acknowledging our own mortality as human beings helps us draw deeper meanings from a life lived in the midst of the visible. 

    https://www.timcarpenterphotography.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/timcarpenter

    • 1 hr 42 min
    13. Takeshi Morisato: Tanabe Hajime, Absolute Nothingness and the Philosophy of the Kyoto School

    13. Takeshi Morisato: Tanabe Hajime, Absolute Nothingness and the Philosophy of the Kyoto School

    Peter speaks to the Japanese philosopher Takeshi Morisato about the 20th-century Kyoto School intellectual named Tanabe Hajime, whose philosophical method assimilated traditional elements of Japanese Buddhism with the perspectives of Western existentialism and Judeo-Christian theology during a period of enormous social upheaval in the history of modern Japan. Takeshi Morisato is a lecturer in Non-Western Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh. He is also the current editor of the European Journal of Japanese Philosophy and the assistant editor of the Journal of East Asian Philosophy. In 2021 he published a short introduction to the thought of Tanabe Hajime titled Tanabe Hajime and the Kyoto School: Self, World and Knowledge via Bloomsbury. 

    • 2 hrs 33 min
    12. Juuso Noronkoski: The Aesthetic Object

    12. Juuso Noronkoski: The Aesthetic Object

    Peter joins Juuso Noronkoski at his studio in Helsinki to discuss the Finnish artist's photographic-based sculptural practice. Recognised for his ability to challenge and transform our expectations of the photographic image, Juuso's work has been exhibited worldwide in countries such as Japan and Germany. Drawing its inspiration from the phenomenon of different natural cycles, Juuso’s work is a spatiotemporal performative response to ideas of geological and cosmological time. Whilst noted for his small-scale and mixed media gallery-specific installations, what is perhaps remarkable about Juuso's work is the way it invites the spectator to think beyond the walls of the white cube to reflect on art’s relationship to the natural world at large. 

    http://www.juusonoronkoski.com/

    Join the conversation on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelandbehind

    • 2 hrs 17 min

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