While I have held the title of docent (Swedish equivalent of continental-European habilitation) since June’24, it is only now that there is a chance for a moment of celebration.
Namely, if you are in Linköping on 25th February, please join us for the Docent and Professor’s Lectures organised by the Department of Thematic Studies (TEMA), where I will have a pleasure to present along with Prof. Thomas Kaiserfeld.
In my docent lecture ‘Biophilosophical Investigations: Between Environmental Humanities, Queer Death Studies, and Artistic Research’, I will take you on a little tour de force through my post-PhD research.
Hope to see you there.
New publication: Deterritorilising Death
It is my great pleasure to say that my latest article Deterritorialising Death: Queerfeminist Biophilosophy and Ecologies of the Non/Living in Contemporary Art, forming part of the special issue of Australian Feminist Studies focused on “Queer Death Studies: Death, Dying and Mourning From a Queerfeminist Perspective”, co-edited by myself, Tara Mehrabi and Nina Lykke, has just been published online. The text is available in OPEN ACCESS.
Abstract:
In the contemporary context of environmental crises and the degradation of resources, certain habitats become unliveable, leading to the death of individuals and species extinction. Whilst bioscience emphasises interdependency and relationality as crucial characteristics of life shared by all organisms, Western cultural imaginaries tend to draw a thick dividing line between humans and nonhumans, particularly evident in the context of death. On the one hand, death appears as a process common to all forms of life; on the other, as an event that distinguishes human from other organisms. Against this background, this article explores how contemporary art—in particular, the series of works The Absence of Alice (2008–2011) by Australian new-media and bioartist Svenja Kratz—challenges the normative and human-exceptionalist concept of death. By employing queerfeminist biophilosophy as a strategy that focuses on relations, processes and transformations instead of ‘essences’, the article examines the ways Kratz’s works deterritorialise the conventional concept of death. In this way, it hopes to attend to the intimacies between materialities of a human and nonhuman kind that form part of the processes of death and dying, and what follows, to reframe ethico-ontology of death as material and processual ecologies of the non/living.
KEYWORDS: queerfeminist biophilosophy, death, the non/living, Queer Death Studies, art, Svenja Kratz
Mini-symposium ‘Becoming with Alien Encounters…’: the programme!
The full programme of the upcoming event, Mini-symposium Becoming with Alien Encounters and Speculative Storytelling , at which I’ll be giving a talk is finally out! Check it out: ALIEN ENCOUNTERS programme
The event takes place on 5th April at Tema Genus, Linköping University!