On 25/04/2021 20:07, Brian Holmes wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 25, 2021 at 10:53 AM Keith Sanborn wrote:
>
>> Interesting that at a time when planetary survival is in jeopardy,
>> analysts shd return to a geological metaphor. Does history then equal
>> stratigraphy?
>>
>
> That is exactly the claim.
On Sun, Apr 25, 2021 at 10:53 AM Keith Sanborn wrote:
> Interesting that at a time when planetary survival is in jeopardy,
> analysts shd return to a geological metaphor. Does history then equal
> stratigraphy?
>
That is exactly the claim. The geologists of the Anthropocene Working Group
Hey Keith -
Planetary survival? How about the temporary (fleeting!) dominance of a messy
species with brains that allow it to apprehend what it is doing, but seemingly
w/o the ability to overcome evolutionary mandates to stop its consumption of
available energies. With a (solar) system life-time
Interesting that at a time when planetary survival is in jeopardy, analysts shd
return to a geological metaphor. Does history then equal stratigraphy?
> On Apr 25, 2021, at 11:27 AM, Brian Holmes
> wrote:
>
>
>> On Sun, Apr 25, 2021 at 3:27 AM wrote:
>
>>
>> This depth narrative has
On Sun, Apr 25, 2021 at 3:27 AM
wrote:
>
> This depth narrative has never been without its critics later
> structuralists and post-structuralists inverted the story by celebrating
> the surface at the expense of depth. [...] From a visual arts standpoint
> I have always seen this tussle as
The OSUN Center for Human Rights and the Arts at Bard College is
accepting applications for Fall 2021 in its new M.A. in Human Rights
and the Arts. The program offers an advanced interdisciplinary
curriculum that takes stock of the growing encounter between human
rights and the arts, as fields of
On 2021-04-24 08:10, Geert Lovink wrote:
And do not forget the term 'deep Europe', one of the many inventions
coming from the nettime scene… neither East nor West or
continental… https://v2.nl/events/deep-europe/view
We could track contemporary versions of the so called ‘depth narrative’
back