COOP ~ Reframing Climate Colonialism: Pleasuring the Radical Imagination from Month to Month

Seminar 7: 14 - 21 July 2021

       

Wednesday 14-7

     
       

breakfast

cleaning duties

   

morning

11:30 - 13:00

check in

all

   

Fictionalizing the strike

Clem

   

Materializing Kinship

 

lunch

     

afternoon

 

discussing RRR

Clem & Ying

dinner

     

evening

 

student led

Marika & Dakota

       

Thursday 15-7

     
       

breakfast

     

morning

10:30 - 12:30

Positioning within CJC

Zoe Scoglio & Amy Pekal

lunch

     

afternoon

 

TBC

guest

dinner

 

cleaning duties

 

evening

 

-

 
       

Friday 16-7

     
       

breakfast

     

morning

10:00 - 13:00

Positioning within CJC

Zoe Scoglio & Amy Pekal

lunch

     

afternoon

 

Text: Unthinking Mastery

Clem

dinner

     

evening

 

student led

Mia & Raul

       

Saturday 17-7

     
       

breakfast

     

morning

 

text: Indigenizing the Anthroposcene

Ying

lunch

 

cleaning duties

 

afternoon

 

walk & Fika

 

dinner

     

evening

 

student led

Liza

       

Sunday 18-7

     
       

breakfast

     

morning

10:30 - 13:00

workshop

Clem

lunch

     

afternoon

15:00 - 18:00

Timelining workshop

Ying

dinner

     

evening

 

student led

Csilla

       

Monday 19-7

     
       

breakfast

cleaning duties

   

morning

11:30 - 13:00

Recipe Sharing

Ying

lunch

     

afternoon

15:00 - 19:00

Disobedient Art workshop

Teresa Borasino (Fossil Free Culture NL)

dinner

     

evening

 

film night (Zheng Bo & Onyeke Igwe)

 
       

Tuesday 20-7

     
       

breakfast

     

morning

 

student led

Elvis

lunch

     

afternoon

 

Summit Session

 

dinner

cleaning duties

   

evening

 

Summit Session

 

 

Seminar 6: 2 - 6 June 2021

Climate-just Abundance & Embodying the Commons

CJC: Care, Community & the Commons

Lead by Ying & Clem

With Amit, Marianna & Katherine

Online access: One ZOOM link for all meetings hared to you via email by Nikos

Thursday, 3 June 

Thursday sessions accessible online: 1, 2, 3

With Amit 2-5.30pm

MORNING 

10 - 11am       Introduction to the week on the CJC’s ‘Care, Community & the Commons’ section. In which we take a breath, check in, meet Ying, adapt to each others’ in-person and digital energies, allocate digital angels, encounter the grounding cushions if meeting in person.

11.20 – 1pm   Jumana Emil Abboud listening session

AFTERNOON

2 - 3.30 pm     Reading the CJC – doing care & community in the framework of climate justice & climate colonialism.

3.30                 Tea Break

3.45 - 5.30       The art of noticing – (returning to) Anna Tsing        

EVENING

6.30 – 7.30      Talismanic material-kinship artwork exchange -   Dance session

7.30 – 9.30pm  

Making Queer Kin – Heather Davis & Sophie Lewis (online)

How do the logics of care repeat and renew racist, anti-migrant, nationalist, and capitalist assumptions?

with dinner during the livestream

Friday, 4 June

Friday sessions accessible online: 1 (with Katherine), 2 (with Amit)

MORNING

10 - 1pm    Sonic community conjuring - with Katherine MacBride 

12.30-13     Check out

AFTERNOON

3 - 5.30pm    Amit

2 - 2.45pm     In pairs, walking

Lara Khaldi - ‘We’re still alive, so remove us from memory: Asynchronicity and the Museum in Resistance’, 2020, pp 49 - 56

2.45 – 4pm    Group conversation about Lara Khaldi’s text

BREAK

4.15 - 5.30    Return to Community

5.30 - 6.30     Metabolising through making      

7 - 8pm    

EVENING

9 - 9.30    Eco-fisting week   

9.30 - 10     A Ship of Fools, by Ada M Patterson, 2020, film screening 

Saturday, 5 June

Saturday sessions accessible online: 10.30 - 11.30; 3-5pm; 5.30 onwards TBC Alex & Emmeli

IRL students: please meet in the St Louise yoga room at 10.15am. It's on the same level as our classroom, at the end of the corridor on the left. On the dining-hall side of the building. 

MORNING

10.15pm Check in

Stretching

10.30 Material Kinship exchange online

11.30 Performance as embodied theory WORKSHOP offline

AFTERNOON

1 - 2.30pm Picnic LUNCH offline

Dress code: something that makes you feel great!

3 - 5pm

Take Back the Economy session with diagramming

5.30 – 8pm Emmeli & Alex | Student-led three-part sound workshop

 Online access info to follow

EVENING

9pm Emmeli & Alex | Student-led workshop continues

 Online access info to follow

Sunday, 6 June

Sunday sessions accessible online: 1, 2, 3

MORNING

10.15               Check ins

10.30 – 12.30pm

Read-In: Collective practice with Ying & Marianna

Haunted Bookshelves: Memorising practice

For this session, students are to bring a quote to memorise together that responds to the question: When there’s never enough time and survival is uncertain, what is a story without an end?

AFTERNOON

2 – 4pm          Student-led session

Further conversation around collective SUMMIT wishes, including planning, delegation, work to be done, harvesting.  

4 – 5pm          Fictionalising the Strike artwork presentation

5 – 6.30pm     Summit overview, recap of week & feedback

BREAK

7 – 8pm          TBC       

EVENING

9 pm               Continue with Summit  & recap | OR

Reframing settler-coloniality & dreaming otherwise in Palestine

  • reading group of ‘Song of the Birds’ Saleem Haddad
  • screening of ‘Electrical Gaza’ by Rosalind Nashashibi
  • conversation around ‘Where Nature Ends & Settlement Begins’ Jumana Manna

----

Please Bring/Prepare

  • A quote of 3 to 5 sentences that resonates around the question: 'When there’s never enough time and survival is uncertain, what is a story without an end?'

  • Raul/Emmeli/Alex - 2 x student-led nights per the email. 

  • ‘Nice clothes’ for an afternoon journey — clothes that make you feel GREAT — if you fancy getting in the spirit. 

  • Your Fictionalising the Strike works from April, if you would like to share them with the group.

  • Your Material Kinship works to gift to your recipient from February (for gifting). 

Readings

  • Lara Khaldi - ‘We’re still alive, so remove us from memory: Asynchronicity and the Museum in Resistance’, 2020, pp 49 - 56 NON FICTION

  • J. K. Gibson-Graham, Jenny Cameron & Stephen Healy - Chapter 2: ‘Take Back Work’ with a focus on pp 17—39 Take Back the Economy, 2013 NON FICTION

  • Anna Tsing - Chapters 1 & 2: ‘Arts of Noticing’ & 'Contamination as Collaboration', The Mushroom at the End of the World, 2015, pp 17--34 NON FICTION 

All required reading on the drive: 

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1RPethAKMzBzRqtUyYZ3VPH8OIDA6C0kI

Further Reading

  • Saleem Haddad, ‘Song of the Birds’, in Palestine +100, 2018, FICTION in the drive

  • Jumana Manna - ‘Where Nature Ends and Settlement Begins’ , e-flux, November 2020 [online] NON FICTION 

https://www.e-flux.com/journal/113/360006/where-nature-ends-and-settlements-begin/ 

 

Seminar 3: 20 - 21 February 2021

Material Kinship, Extraction & Workshopping the Self

Led by Clementine Edwards

Saturday, 20 February 

10am – 1pm CET (4am – 7am GMT+5; 8pm – 11pm AEDT) 

2pm – 5pm CET (8am - 11am GMT+5; 12am - 3am AEDT) 

Sunday, 21 February 

10am - 1pm CET (4am - 7am GMT+5; 8pm - 11pm AEDT) 

Led by Clementine Edwards & Katherine MacBride

‘How, in our modern world, can we find our way to understand the earth as a gift again, to make our relations with the world sacred again? … even in a market economy, can we behave “as if” the living world were a gift?’  - Robin Wall Kimmerer 

‘Growing the white population through biologically reproductive heterosexual marriage was crucial to settler-colonial nation-building… In short, white bodies and white families in spaces of safety have been propagated in intimate co-constitution with the culling of black, red, and brown bodies and the wastelanding of their spaces.’ - Kim TallBear 

‘The stories we choose to shape our behaviours have adaptive consequences,’ says Robin Wall Kimmerer. She says that our relationship with the living world – and here I’d add the non-living world, too – can be ‘transformed by our choice of perspective’. Last year, we met ‘Man the Hero’, shook his hand and moved on to the oat fields, basket in hand. As tenderly as the barefoot sands ritual, we read Ursula Le Guin and Vanessa Agard-Jones and spoke about memory-making and climate crisis. In January we speculated about Black care as intersectional future-building, and learned from radical disability politics about holistic accessibility. Nuance, texture, embodiment, abundance and generosity have guided our thinking. 

This week we drill down into climate colonialism to pick out and discuss ideas of extraction, possession and white-bodied supremacy. Climate crisis was precipitated by and began at the point of (settler-)colonialism. Primarily, the intention of European colonies was resource extraction. European powers developed the dual concepts of race and accumulation. Colonising countries appropriated and decimated Indigenous lands under the mandate of property law, and murdered, enslaved and indentured Black and Indigenous people at industrial scales. Whiteness, operationalised as a marker of ‘the human’, was constituted as a governing ideology in newly established settler-colonies and deployed to establish order across class. 

Beginning with a text from Kim TallBear, we’ll think into methods of kin-making and caretaking that go beyond the monogamous, biologically reproductive white nuclear family (what TallBear calls the ‘settler sexuality system’). We will also continue our poetic exploration of doing politics and life  – ‘workshopping the self’ – within the frame of our art practice, via activities, readings and a material kinship workshop that centres grounding, place-based making and material delight. Beyond extraction and possession, the workshop is about precarious world-building, story-telling, and reconstituting what it might mean to pay attention to and make kin with the local material world that is already before us. Finally and importantly, we’ll collectively engage with the idea of the artist as ‘individual’ practitioner, and ways in which one’s perception of self-as-artist might be bound up in Western cosmologies. 

To extract: 

  1. to draw forth or get out by force: to extract a tooth. 
  2. to deduce (a doctrine, principle, etc.). 
  3. to derive or obtain (pleasure, comfort, etc.) from a particular source. 
  4. to take or copy out (matter from a book, etc.). 
  5. to extort (information, money, etc.). 
  6. to separate or obtain (a juice, ingredient, principle, etc.) from a mixture by pressure, distillation, treatment with solvents, or the like. 
  7. Metallurgyto separate a metal from its ore by any process. 
  8. Mathematicsto determine (the root of a quantity). 

Definition of the verb taken from Macquarie Dictionary, 2021 

Readings:

  • Kim TallBear, ‘Making Love and Relations Beyond Settler Sex and Family’, 2018

READ in the PDF; or WATCH & LISTEN (55 minute listen): 

https://www.youtube.com/watchv=zfdo2ujRUv8&ab_channel=SocialJusticeInstituteUBC 

  • Zora Neale Hurston ‘Magnolia Flower’, 1925

READ in the PDF

  • Tema Okun ‘white supremacy culture’, dRworks 

READ in the PDF or online here.

READ in the PDF or online here.

Further Reading:

  • Michelle Tea, extract from Black Wave, pp, 2015

READ in the PDF; or read the whole book for leisure. (It’s fiction!)

  • Robin Wall Kimmerer ‘Nature Needs a New Pronoun’ 2015, Yes! Magazine

READ in the PDF or online here.

See you Saturday! 

Clem

 

Seminar 2: 18 -19 January 2021

Black Care & Disability Justice 

Facilitator/s: Ama Josephine Budge

Guest/s:  Nish Doshi

Readings:

  • Something So Broken: Black Care in the Wake of Beasts of the Southern Wild, Kyo Maclear 
  • Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, paying particular attention to pages 74-78 - Making Space Accessible is an Act of Love for our Communities
  • Introduction in BodyMinds ReImagined, Sami Schalk
  • Beast of the Southern Wild (film)
    To stream online:
    https://www3.watchseries.so/series/beasts-of-the-southern-wild-axv 

To pay (ie, if not comfortable streaming, then rent on Amazon/HBO, get a receipt and we will reimburse): https://www.amazon.com/Beasts-Southern-Blu-ray-Quvenzhan-Wallis/dp/B008220ALC/ref=tmm_mfc_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= 

*This month the DAI COOP sessions will take place over one full DAI day (equalling 10 hours), I have spread these hours out over two days to moderate the durations of time we will be online together. 

**Times below are indicated in Dutch time, please adjust accordingly if you will be joining us from another time zone. 

Monday January 18th   (10am - 1pm & 4pm - 8.30pm)

10am - 11.15am: Check-in / Catch-up

    Warm Up

    Anything to add to the online access doc?

11.15 - 11.30:    Break

11.30 - 1: Reading Discussion - Care Work Dreaming Disability Justice & BodyMinds ReImagined

1 - 4pm: Break

5 - 7pm: Workshop with Nish Doshi - Climate and Disability Justice: Working from Marginalisation, Erasure and Invisibility (with 10 minute break incorporated)

7- 8pm: Dinner

8-9.30pm: In your own time and space watch Beasts of the Southern Wild (if you haven’t already, if it was a long time ago please rewatch it now)

Please also re-cap the CJC preamble that we read last time, ahead of tomorrow’s session. 

To stream online:
https://www3.watchseries.so/series/beasts-of-the-southern-wild-axv  

To pay (ie, if not comfortable streaming, then rent on Amazon/HBO, get a receipt and we will reimburse you): https://www.amazon.com/Beasts-Southern-Blu-ray-Quvenzhan-Wallis/dp/B008220ALC/ref=tmm_mfc_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=

Tuesday January 19th  (2pm - 5.30pm)

2pm - 2.30pm: Warm up

2.30 - 4pm: Discussion - Beasts of the Southern Wild

        Workshop - Speculating on Black Care as Intersectional Future Building

4 - 4.15: Break

4.15 - 5.15pm: How We Care Matters - introduction to the CJC’s Manual for Use

5.15 - 5.30pm: Close / Check-out

 

Seminar 1: 14-16 November 2020

This week we’ll begin to work with the concept and embodiments of climate colonialism present all around us. The term climate colonialism was an accusation returned to the world’s highest greenhouse gas emitters at the COP21 climate summit (2009).

Climate colonialism is here understood as the historic ontological, epistemological and ecological genocide at the hands of European colonists, the legacy of which we now perceive as climate change. Climate colonialism also engages the global power dynamics of domination and oppression that neo-colonial capitalism reinscribes upon the Global South, who are forced to to pay, economically, ecologically, and socially, for the effects of climate change in cultures, croplands and lives.

Collectively, we’ll explore the ways in which memory-making informs the stories we are told, and how such considerations can inform, or reduce, the possibilities of agency in our readings of climate colonialism, and our ability to respond, to re-frame, to build futures.

We’ll discuss how agency might be found and mental health navigated amidst the crushing weight of colonial violence and the lived violences of racialised life, as well as the collapsing environments of our non-human/alter-life kin.

Finally, we’ll begin to consider the roles and responsibilities of art/ists and cultural institutions within an ecology of environmental transformation, and the way that an intervention like the Climate Justice Code can both insist on and fail to hold them to account.

Essential Readings:

  1. Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction, Ursula Le Guin (1988)
  2. What the Sands Remember, Vanessa Agard-Jones (2012)
  3. Watch: Let Them Drown: the violence of othering in a warming world, Naomi Klein (2016)

Additional Reading:

  • Discourse on Colonialism, Aime Cesaire (1955) - PDF available online

Please Bring/Prepare: 

    • A five minute presentation on your work/practice
      • This can be informal
      • If you would like to use slides please bring these on a USB
    • A towel
    • Warm socks
    • A scarf / blanket

Questions to consider: 

    • In what ways is climate change present in the country/ies that inform your identity?
    • What are some of the colonial relationships that affected the environment/agriculture/ human-to-non-human relations in these countries?
    • How does the above inform your understanding of climate colonialism? 

 

 

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