#podcast Scholar Sarah Nuttall (@WitsInstitute) explores hydropolitics in the Global South, focusing on ‘pluviality’—a concept she coined to study rain and water as more than weather, but as complex entanglements of materiality, time, and spiritualities. In an era of climate emergency, she merges postcolonial critique with urban theory and literature.

https://rwm.macba.cat/en/podcasts/sonia-372-sarah-nuttall-2/

#Hydrocolonialism #ClimateJustice #GlobalSouth #water

Son[i]a #372 Sarah Nuttall | Podcast | Radio Web MACBA | RWM Podcasts

Sarah Nuttall is a South African scholar and the director of the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. Over the past 10 years…

MACBA Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona
SubAtlantic. Latin American, Caribbean, and Luso-African Ecologies

In stratigraphy, "Subatlantic'' refers to the climatic age the end of which we are currently living through. The SubAtlantic series challenges us to cross-map climate history and environmental crisis with the world-ecological chronotope of the Iberian South Atlantic. While colonial expansion triggered monocrop plantations, extractive networks, genocide and enslavement, this world-ecological formation has also been a hotbed of resilient imaginaries of survivance and alliance-making among existents, from Caribbean Maroon ecologies to the multinaturalist ontologies of Amazonian and Andean societies as well as their reconfigurations in contemporary activisms and artistic practice. Spanning the field in its geographical and historical breadth, as well as challenging polarized cartographies between North/South or center/periphery, we welcome submissions in the environmental humanities that are conversant with areas of innovation and expansion, including but not limited to animal, plant and fungal studies; energy humanities; hydroaesthetics; art-science activisms; transfeminist and queer ecocriticims. Editorial Board Mary Louise Pratt (New York University) Laura Barbas-Rohden (Wofford College) Adriana Michele Campos Johnson (UC Irvine) Carolyn Fornoff (Cornell University) Valeria de los Ríos (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile) Luz Horne (Universidad de San Andrés) Lesley Wylie (University of Leicester) Orlando Bentancor (Barnard College) Joanna Page (Cambridge University)

De Gruyter