[PeDAGoG] Fwd: Talk series (Online): Cheap energy in the Capitalocene Dr. Jason W. Moore and Dr. Jaume Franquesa
Carlos Tornel
tornelc at gmail.com
Tue Jul 20 10:00:00 CEST 2021
Dear all,
With apologies for crossposting.
Just a remainder of the upcoming talk by Dr. Jason W. Moore and Dr. Jaume
Franquesa that will take place next *Thursday, 22nd July 2021 (16:00 -
18:00) (BST), via Zoom*, it is free and open for all.
More details below.
Centre for Culture and Ecology – Talk Series on Capitalism, Nature and
Climate.
Dr. Jason W. Moore and Dr. Jaume Franquesa - *Cheap energy in the
Capitalocene: Accumulation, waste, and the struggles for reparation
ecologies.*
*Thursday, 22nd July 2021 (16:00 - 18:00) (BST), via Zoom.*
Registration open via the following link:
https://forms.office.com/r/3b5V4mCLL1
More Information about the talk here:
https://www.durham.ac.uk/research/institutes-and-centres/culture-ecology/about-us/events/cce-talk-22-july-jason-moore-and-jaume-franquesa/
*Talk Abstract: *
Using the term Capitalocene means taking capitalism seriously, not just as
an economic system, but as a way of organizing the relations between humans
and the rest of nature. The Capitalocene argues that the modern world is a
result of a set of strategies that seek to "cheapen" and mobilize all kinds
of work with as little compensation as possible, enabling the expansion of
capitalism's frontiers, and extending its control over a wider set of
relations of life. Considering energy as a "cheap thing", reveals how
energy “does work” for capitalism: by amplifying (or substituting) work and
care to advance *productivity *in a system with what appears to be a
limitless demand for growth. The ongoing climate crisis reveals that we are
living with the consequences of a civilization built on cheap energy.
The Capitalocene challenges the idea that renewable energy necessarily
involves a stark rupture with the former modes of energy production.
Instead, it foregrounds how renewable energy
technologies replicate cheapening strategies, creating new
sacrifice zones, and leaving behind environmental risks and social
conflicts. It is through the dialectical relationship between waste and
value that the energy transitions operate: Renewable energy investment is
presented as a redeeming strategy for the unproductiveness or
the wastefulness of certain places, a process
that simultaneously detaches and alienates energy from actual social
relations and cheapens local attachments to land, as well as efforts to
produce autonomous, self-managed livelihoods.
This talk will focus on the strategies of cheap energy that continue to
underpin the power dynamics of energy transitions in different places. It
will engage with concepts such as: *reparation
ecologies and the demands for dignity and revaluation *to encourage a
discussion over how struggles for autonomous livelihoods in the dialectics
between waste and value can redefine how we might live differently in a
world made by capitalism's ecology.
*Bios: *
- Jason W. Moore is an environmental historian and historical geographer
at Binghamton University, where he is professor of sociology. He is author
or editor, most recently, of Capitalism in the Web of Life (Verso,
2015), Capitalocene o Anthropocene? (Ombre Corte, 2017), Anthropocene
or Capitalocene? Nature, History, and the Crisis of Capitalism (PM Press,
2016), and, with Raj Patel, A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things
(University of California Press, 2017).
- Jaume Franquesa is Associate Professor of Anthropology at The State
University of New York at Buffalo. His research agenda focuses on the
relationship between the commodification of resources and the making of
local livelihoods. His interests include energy transitions, land-rural
politics, and processes of cultural heritage making. His most recent book
is Power Struggles: Dignity, Value, and the Renewable Energy Frontier in
Spain (Indiana University Press, 2018).
This talk will be co-chaired by Andrew Baldwin and Carlos Tornel.
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