Welcome to take part in the 11th Stockholm Archipelag Lecture:
The Less Selfish Gene: Forest Altruism, Neoliberalism, and the Tree of Life
with Rob Nixon
Time: Thu, Nov 10, 2022, 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM, CET
Location: On zoom:
https://kth-se.zoom.us/meeting/register/u5IsceytpjIuE9YU6W7DCSPNCcIq2zam9Dhd
Why have millions of readers and viewers become magnetized by the hitherto arcane field of
plant communication? Since the great recession of 2008, we have witnessed an upsurge in
public science writing that has popularized research into forest sentience, forest
suffering and the forest as collective intelligence. This talk roots the current appeal of
forest communication in a widespread discontent with neoliberalism’s antipathy to
cooperative ways of being. Nixon argues that the science of forest dynamics offers a
counter-narrative of flourishing, an allegory for what George Monbiot has called “private
sufficiency and public wealth.
Rob Nixon is the Barron Family Professor in Environment and Humanities at Princeton
University. His books include, most recently, Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of
the Poor. Nixon is currently completing a book entitled Blood at the Root. Environmental
Martyrs and the Defense of Life. Nixon writes frequently for the New York Times. His
writing has also appeared in The New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, The Guardian, The Nation,
London Review of Books, The Village Voice, Aeon, Orion, Critical Inquiry and elsewhere.
Environmental justice struggles in the global South are central to Nixon’s work. He is a
particularly fascinated by the animating role that artists can play in relation to social
movements.
The lecture consists of a key note talk followed by a Q&A session, where the zoom
audience will get a chance to ask questions to Rob Nixon.
Welcome!
Sofia Jonsson,
on behalf of the KTH Environmental Humanities Laboratory
[Kth Logo]
Sofia Jonsson
Administrative Group Manager
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Department of Philosophy and History
Div. of History of Science, Technology and Environment
SE-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden
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