<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large">Dear Elaine!</div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large"><br></div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large">What a wonderful set of questions. Let me try to give a short response to just one of these great questions. </div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large"><br></div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large">The question of temporality is of course central to our times. I think some of the confusion over Anthropocene/Capitalocene turns on geological and geohistorical time: both of which are multilayered with each other, and as they interpenetrate each other. There are a vexing set of dimensions to these historical-geographical relations, and disciplinary structures tend to reinforce the problem. </div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large"><br></div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large">In critical agrarian studies, the tension between the "production time" of a specific primary product -- timber, wheat, cotton, etc. -- and the "labor time" of the humans involved has been a recurrent question. Of course for capitalism as a whole, there's a profound antagonism between the reproduction time of capital and the reproduction time of other forms of life, especially but not only that which capital prizes: labor-power. In the history of sugar, we are dealing -- as ever -- with layers within layers. It's easy to lapse into agronomic determinism with something like sugar, whose ecology mandates some form of the "factory in the field": sugarcane, once cut, dessicates quickly and must be processed with 48 hours. It's not the only crop with this kind time-sensitive dynamic at the point of cultivation. But because the modern world's dynamics of race, colonialism, and commodity agriculture find their epicenter in the slave/sugar plantation, it's an expressive world-ecological weave of power, and capital, and nature in a way that tells us much about how our world came to be. Of course, in the modern world, neither the "time of nature" nor the "time of capital" are static; they interpenetrate each other: if capital's fantasy is to act as it pleases in disciplining and controlling natures of every kind (humans included), that fantasy, that project, is consistently upended, upset, and challenged by all manner of unruly natures. With sugar, as with all plantation crops, there is always a complex of resistances: weeds, rats, soils, and of course the humans who work the fields. Some of these resistances have been more spectacular -- e.g. the Haitian Revolution -- than others. It's the question of power that produces and is produced by the temporalities of "life" and "capital" (which is but a heuristic and provisional simplification). Where a certain world-historical sensibility is useful is in the ways that such resistances have been "fixed" albeit temporarily: largely through great waves of imperialism, geographical expansion, and the restructuring of agro-ecological spaces on an increasingly planetary scale. But even here there's no escape, as one notes the upsurge in resistances to neoliberal agriculture in recent decades, underscored by the progressive stagnation of agricultural productivity in the heartlands of capitalist agriculture over the past three decades -- here is a possibly epochal failure of capitalism's agricultural model, shaped by a logic of time and space that pursues a utopian goal: the endless increase in the biological productivity of life and the endless decrease in the human work necessary to achieve such increases.</div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:garamond,serif;font-size:large"><br>A few thoughts to close out the evening.<br><br>Warm regards to all, Jason</div></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Oct 24, 2017 at 4:26 PM, Elaine Gan <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:eganuc@gmail.com" target="_blank">eganuc@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------<br><div dir="ltr">
<p class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-p1">Thanks so much, Margaretha, for bringing discussions together! It's been exciting to hear so many commitments, approaches to radical aesthetics and multispecies worldings. Very much looking forward to exploring "Capitalocene Times" with Joline and Jason, and hope many will feel free to chime in.<span class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-Apple-converted-space"> </span></p><p class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-p1">Much of my own work in the past few years has focused on rice. To take "it" seriously involves recognizing that "it" is always and already multiple: grass, food crop, code, companion species, currency, hope, crisis, dump. It's a more-than-human relation that materializes through contingent encounters. To describe rice, I needed to really start thinking about temporalities --not only timescales of long and short, geos-bios-anthropos, speeds of fast and slow. But temporalities that are made in relation. Following postwar miracle rice, for example, involved thinking about differences in acceleration and reproduction cycles. Following deepwater rice in the Mekong involved thinking about synchrony and asynchrony. And the relationalities include vegetal, animal, fungal, chemical, etc.<span class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-Apple-converted-space"> Lots of natureculture times.</span><br></p>
<p class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-p2">I wonder if I might throw a couple of questions into our hat:<br></p>
<p class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-p2">first, if I can interest Jason and Joline: how might you describe the temporalities of wild blueberries, and sugar or sugar cane plantations? What is the temporality of "cheap" and how does it interact with the temporality of "wild", "feral", or the lifemaking pulse of "oikeios"?</p>
<p class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-p3">and, a more open question: how might we map or visualize the Capitalocene (or Anthropocene, Plantationcene, Chthulucene, etc)<span class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-Apple-converted-space"> </span>as it unfolds across speeds and scales? I'd love to hear what the empyre group is finding intriguing lately --or historically. For a few years, my friend <a href="http://www.michellebastian.net/" target="_blank">Michelle Bastian</a> and I have been in conversation about more-than-human social times. She is currently on leave but has kindly agreed to share this fun piece she wrote (attached) about imagining other possible futures through clocks.<span class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-Apple-converted-space"> I also have been working with amazing collaborators, Sarah Lookofsky and Steve Lam. We co-curated an exhibition entitled "<a href="http://elainegan.com/dump.html" target="_blank">DUMP! Multispecies Making and Unmaking</a>" (2015) to engage an array of creative and critical practices that think across the nature-culture divide. And we are always negotiating what is the "work of art" and how/what/for whom it mobilizes worlds otherwise.</span></p><p class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-p3">Best,</p><p class="m_-2618170581466354427gmail-p3">Elaine<br></p></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Mon, Oct 23, 2017 at 8:36 PM, margaretha haughwout <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:margaretha.anne.haughwout@gmail.com" target="_blank">margaretha.anne.haughwout@<wbr>gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------<br><div dir="ltr">Dear -empyre-,<br><br>One of the many themes of this week was the nature of our solidarity with the more-than-human. How do we understand the nature of our relationships, in revolution, in celebration, grief, and excess? Do we configure weeds as guides, Immortal Strangers as revenge tutors (as Cassie and Max's University of the Phoenix does), as re-enchanters who are and have always been -- "us"?<br><br>At Johannes' prompting, we continued to extend our understandings of cross-species media between and through; Ellie and Chris discuss conceptual art strategies that create new framing devices, and new ways of knowing and being with our weedy relatives. Adam urges us to consider that our inter-species "knowing" is a facet of all of life, and argues that we all, already know, because we are already not human, and more-than-human.<br><br>A heartfelt thank you to this week's discussants (and their microbiomes): Ellie Irons & Christopher Kennedy of the Environmental Performance Agency, Max Haiven & Cassie Thornton of The University of the Phoenix, and to Adam Zaretsky.<br><br>These threads are alive! Not structured by abstracted moon cycles! Please continue to post to them.<br><br>--<br><br>Speaking of re-enchantment, of enlivened relational environments, and temporality.... Joline Blais, Elaine Gan, Jason W. Moore are Week Four's discussants, under the title "Capitalocene Times: from Entangled Plants-People to Cheap Food-Sick Consumers" -- and I for one (?) am totally enchanted and enlivened by their presence here.<br><br>Interestingly, each of our discussants this week have done considerable work on specific crops: Joline on blueberries -- the stories, and the matrix of relationships blueberries enable in Northern Maine, Elaine on rice varietals as technology and "time machine," Jason on the relationship between sugar and early capitalism. So we can begin by asking whether specific crop commodities such as sugar, rice, and blueberries teach us alternate ways of mapping global (sugar), regional (rice), local (blueberries) economies? And what kinds of temporalities and historical materialisms are enacted or destroyed by the cultivation of particular crops (in fact, can we reconcile historical materialism and speculative futures?). We might also look broadly through these crops and others at how processes of appropriation and exploitation function together to render Jason's articulations of Cheap Natures.<br><br>There are so many threads we can pull in to this final weave. One is where we began, a question of systems and entanglements. In Week One we asked how systems inform a radical aesthetics of multispecies worlding, and where and how entanglements challenge systems thinking. I'd also like to connect this question to some of the conversations about interspecies relationality that came up in Week Three, and (again) ask Jason to outline his term oikeios; is this concept useful for us here, and can it help us out of some of the binaries that are so easy to become ensnared in? If so, what kind of oikeios do we want to create? How can the oikeios help us understand how to form "revolutionary ecologies of work"?<br><br>With warmth and gratitude,<br>-M<br><br>--<br><br>Joline Blais<br>Joline Blais, Associate Professor of New Media at UMaine, is a mother, educator, writer, permaculture practitioner, ecovillage founding partner, competitive rower, avid hiker, and alpine ski coach. She co-directs Still Water, and co-founded LongGreenHouse, a “communiversity” project integrating the Wassokeag K-8 school, UMaine classes, permaculture practices, and Wabanaki Longhouse traditions. Her subsequent work at the Belfast Ecovillage spanned 8 years and involved permaculture design, art projects and workshops, land use governance, restorative justice facilitation, dynamic governance, non-violent communication and transition town training, and initial development of food forest orchards, as well as design, construction and research of a net-zero, solar energy "passive haus."<br><br>Her 2006 book At the Edge of Art investigates how new media art puts the power of networks and distributed creativity into the hands of ordinary citizens in a variety of non-art contexts. Her other publications and creative work explore the overlap of digital culture, indigenous culture and permaculture. Currently she is working on Wild Difference, a project to prevent the extinction of Wild Maine blueberries and the local culture that support them via a lead grant for the development of a physical Wild Blueberry Museum, and a pending NEH grant to develop the companion online virtual museum. Her time in the forests, and on and in the water (liquid or frozen) help maintain her own wild connection to her homeland.<br><br><br>Elaine Gan<br>Elaine Gan is Mellon Digital Humanities fellow at University of Southern California and art director of Aarhus University Research on the Anthropocene (AURA). Raised in the big old cities of Manila and New York, Gan is an artist and interdisciplinary scholar who studies how human-plant interactions situate geopolitical histories. Recent projects include co-editing an anthology, Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene (Minnesota 2017) and co curating an artscience exhibition, DUMP! Multispecies Making and Unmaking (Kunsthal Aarhus 2015).<br><a href="http://elainegan.com" target="_blank">http://elainegan.com</a><br><br><br>Jason W. Moore<br>Jason W. Moore is an environmental historian and historical geographer at Binghamton University, where he is associate professor of sociology. He is author or editor, most recently, of Capitalism in the Web of Life (Verso, 2015), Capitalocene o Antropocene? (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). His books and essays on environmental history, capitalism, and social theory have been widely recognized, including the Alice Hamilton Prize of the American Society for Environmental History (2003), the Distinguished Scholarship Award of the Section on the Political Economy of the World-System (American Sociological Association, 2002 for articles, and 2015 for Web of Life), and the Byres and Bernstein Prize in Agrarian Change (2011). He is chair (2017-18) of the Political Economy of the World-System Section (ASA), and coordinates the World-Ecology Research Network.<br><br><br></div>
<br>______________________________<wbr>_________________<br>
empyre forum<br>
<a href="mailto:empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au" target="_blank">empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.ed<wbr>u.au</a><br>
<a href="http://empyre.library.cornell.edu" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">http://empyre.library.cornell.<wbr>edu</a><br></blockquote></div><br></div>
<br>______________________________<wbr>_________________<br>
empyre forum<br>
<a href="mailto:empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au">empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.<wbr>edu.au</a><br>
<a href="http://empyre.library.cornell.edu" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">http://empyre.library.cornell.<wbr>edu</a><br></blockquote></div><br><br clear="all"><div><br></div>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature" data-smartmail="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr"><div><div dir="ltr"><div><div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr"><div style="font-family:garamond,serif"><font size="4">Jason W. Moore, Associate Professor</font><font size="4"><br></font></div><div style="font-family:garamond,serif"><font size="4">Department of Sociology, Binghamton University</font>
</div><div style="font-family:garamond,serif"><font size="4">Recent books, </font><i style="font-size:large">Capitalism in the Web of Life </i></div><div><font size="4"><font face="garamond, serif"><a href="http://www.versobooks.com/books/1924-capitalism-in-the-web-of-life" target="_blank">http://www.versobooks.com/books/1924-capitalism-in-the-web-of-life</a> </font><br></font></div><div style="font-family:garamond,serif"><font size="4"><i>Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature, History, and the Crisis of Capitalism</i></font></div><div><a href="https://secure.pmpress.org/index.php?l=product_detail&p=779" rel="noreferrer" style="color:rgb(17,85,204)" target="_blank"><font face="garamond, serif" size="4">https://secure.pmpress.org/index.php?l=product_detail&p=779</font></a><font size="4" style="font-family:garamond,serif"><i><br></i></font></div><div style="font-family:garamond,serif"><font size="4">Many of my essays are posted on my website:<a href="http://jasonwmoore.com/" target="_blank">http://jasonwmoore.com</a><br></font></div><div style="font-family:garamond,serif"><font size="4">Recent short essays can be found here: <a href="http://jasonwmoore.wordpress.com/" target="_blank">http://jasonwmoore.wordpress.com/</a> <br></font></div><div><font size="4" style="font-family:garamond,serif">For more on the world-ecology conversation, join us on <a href="http://academia.edu" target="_blank">academia.edu</a>: </font><font face="garamond, serif" size="4"><a href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/World-Ecology" target="_blank">https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/World-Ecology</a></font></div><div><font face="garamond, serif" size="4">And also on Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/worldecology/" target="_blank">https://www.facebook.com/worldecology/</a> </font></div><div> </div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div>
</div>