12 episodes

We are a podcast about climate change that engages with interdisciplinary perspectives on more-than-human worlds through interviews, field recordings, and experimental sound.

Multispecies Worldbuilding Lab Multispecies Worldbuilding

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 11 Ratings

We are a podcast about climate change that engages with interdisciplinary perspectives on more-than-human worlds through interviews, field recordings, and experimental sound.

    Shannon Mattern

    Shannon Mattern

    SHANNON MATTERN is a theorist and professor of media, design, architecture, and anthropology at the New School for Social Research in New York.

    In this lively episode, Mattern asks: what metaphors, tools, and projects are needed to imagine ways of building and repairing our cities more collaboratively? She shares her expansive interests—from computation, interconnection, and urban intelligences to thinking with trees, writing as grafting, supporting public libraries, and redesigning the academy.

    Mattern is the author of multiple books and essays. Her most recent book is A City Is Not A Computer: Other Urban Intelligences (Princeton 2021). She is also a contributing writer for Places, an online journal of architecture, urbanism, and landscape design. 
    https://wordsinspace.net/
    twitter @shannonmattern

    • 57 min
    Una Chaudhuri & Marina Zurkow

    Una Chaudhuri & Marina Zurkow

    Friendship as method and medium is the heart of this conversation between Marina Zurkow and Una Chaudhuri, artists-academics behind "Dear Climate," a New York-based art collective that engages with climate change through public installations, design, experimental pedagogies, and playful toolkits for multispecies survival. Marina and Una share stories of early teaching in the field of Animal Studies, arriving at the right name and mode of address for the collective, and the many friendships that have deepened their shared practice and aesthetico-political commitments to multispecies worlds over the last decade.

    • 35 min
    Cecilia Vicuña and Sarah Lookofsky

    Cecilia Vicuña and Sarah Lookofsky

    Two rivers situate our conversation with two friends, poet/artist Cecilia Vicuña and art historian/curator Sarah Lookofsky. El Río Mapocho begins in the Andes Mountains and runs through the city of Santiago, Chile where Cecilia was born, while the River Akerselva begins in Maridal Lake and flows through waterfalls and former industrial areas of Oslo where Sarah recently moved. What might we learn to hear if we attend to the interweaving languages of these ancient waters and the many lives, joys, brutalities, and deaths they carry, remember, and resist? In this episode, Cecilia and Sarah talk about multispecies connection, histories of contamination and colonialism, quantum co-evolution, listening with fingers, dancing with mussels, speaking with red wing thrushes, and the "explosive commitment to the beauty of being alive."
     
    ceciliavicuna
    sarahlookofsky

    • 1 hr 9 min
    Paul Sadowski

    Paul Sadowski

    PAUL SADOWSKI, mycologist and musician, shares stories about working with John Cage and sound, learning about fungi and trees with Gary Lincoff and NY Mycological Society, and going on fungi forays throughout New York.

    Paul is a mycologist, musician, and autographer based in New York City. He teaches at the New York Botanical Gardens and is a beloved member of the New York Mycological Society with whom he has led forays in all seasons throughout the state, guided mushroom identification sessions and fungi surveys, and taught mycological microscopy for many happy years, and counting. Mushrooms, Paul says, are always surprising.

    • 1 hr 6 min
    Lesley Green - Part 2

    Lesley Green - Part 2

    Lesley Green, anthropologist and science studies scholar in Cape Town, discusses her new book Rock | Water | Life: Ecology and Humanities for a Decolonial South Africa (Duke/Wits Press 2020). Green develops an ecopolitical approach to critically engage with South Africa's history of racial oppression and environmental extraction, paying close attention to water conflicts, natural gas fracking, baboon management, sewage, soil, and land restitution. Emphasizing the "relation," Green calls for a paradigm shift that requires collaboration, experimentation, pedagogy, and laughter.

    • 41 min
    Lesley Green - Part 1

    Lesley Green - Part 1

    How might humanists, social scientists, and natural scientists do "research that matters and matters politically" in the Anthropocene? 
    Lesley Green is an anthropologist and science studies scholar based in Cape Town who invites us to inhabit the diverse ecologies, violent colonial histories, neoliberal logics, and possible futurities from within South Africa. Emphasizing the "relation," Green proposes a critical paradigm shift that requires collaboration, experimentation, pedagogy, and laughter.
     

    • 48 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
11 Ratings

11 Ratings

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