Event

Dec 19, 2017
The Body Politic: Human Being and Becoming in the Planetary Era

The Anthropocene cries out for deep inquiry into the peculiar place of the "anthropos" in the scheme of things. The dawning of the Anthropocene compels us to ask ourselves not only, “What on Earth are we doing?” but even more fundamentally, “What on Earth are we?” Rather than viewing such issues as climate change, mass extinction, world hunger, and political polarization as happening “out there,” what happens when we experience them emotionally and somatically as also happening “in here?" Our capacity for self-awareness, integrative thinking, holding multiple perspectives, tolerating uncertainty and ambiguity, and working with difficult emotions will be essential to creatively navigating the Anthropocene. The mind’s ability to adopt a meta-position relative to its own contents, thereby consciously integrating somatic, emotional, and mental experience, has profound implications for civic discourse and collective action.


Karen Litfin has been on the Political Science and Environmental Studies faculty at the University of Washington since 1991. Her books include Ozone Discourses: Science and Politics in Global Environmental Cooperation and The Greening of Sovereignty. In her research and teaching, she endeavors to integrate the cognitive, emotive, and hands-on dimensions of sustainability.  That commitment led her to write a book about her travels to ecovillages around the world: Ecovillages: Lessons for Sustainable Community (Polity Press, 2014).  Karen’s current research is on the pedagogical and practical value of contemplative practices for addressing global issues.

Address
Berliner Straße 130, 14467 Potsdam, Germany
Room
Ballroom
Contact and Registration

No registration required. For further details please email Franz Mauelshagen.

About This Series

The Anthropocene—the geological epoch of humanity—has established itself as a key concept within a wider scientific and social discourse. In the midst of the dramatic and destabilizing changes to the basic conditions for life on our planet, new epistemic potentials for human action upon the Earth are to be explored.

In the framework of the Anthropocene Lecture series, a number of distinguished speakers accentuating the Anthropocene debate are invited to respond to a topic that will be a central challenge for many generations to come. The lectures take place at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, the Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW), and the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (IASS) in Potsdam.

 

2017-12-19T14:00:00SAVE IN I-CAL 2017-12-19 14:00:00 2017-12-19 15:00:00 The Body Politic: Human Being and Becoming in the Planetary Era The Anthropocene cries out for deep inquiry into the peculiar place of the "anthropos" in the scheme of things. The dawning of the Anthropocene compels us to ask ourselves not only, “What on Earth are we doing?” but even more fundamentally, “What on Earth are we?” Rather than viewing such issues as climate change, mass extinction, world hunger, and political polarization as happening “out there,” what happens when we experience them emotionally and somatically as also happening “in here?" Our capacity for self-awareness, integrative thinking, holding multiple perspectives, tolerating uncertainty and ambiguity, and working with difficult emotions will be essential to creatively navigating the Anthropocene. The mind’s ability to adopt a meta-position relative to its own contents, thereby consciously integrating somatic, emotional, and mental experience, has profound implications for civic discourse and collective action. Karen Litfin has been on the Political Science and Environmental Studies faculty at the University of Washington since 1991. Her books include Ozone Discourses: Science and Politics in Global Environmental Cooperation and The Greening of Sovereignty. In her research and teaching, she endeavors to integrate the cognitive, emotive, and hands-on dimensions of sustainability.  That commitment led her to write a book about her travels to ecovillages around the world: Ecovillages: Lessons for Sustainable Community (Polity Press, 2014).  Karen’s current research is on the pedagogical and practical value of contemplative practices for addressing global issues. Berliner Straße 130, 14467 Potsdam, Germany Ballroom Franz Mauelshagen Franz Mauelshagen Europe/Berlin public