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The Parliament of Things and the Anthropocene [PDF]
Among the contemporary philosophers using the concept of the Anthropocene, Bruno Latour and Isabelle Stengers are prominent examples. The way they use this concept, however, diverts from the most common understanding of the Anthropocene. In fact, their use of this notion is a continuation of their earlier work around the concept of a ‘parliament of ...
Massimiliano Simons, null null
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Building Conversation is a collective of artists that creates dialogical art. In September 2019, I invited the Flemish philosopher and theatre maker Peter Aers, also a member of Building Conversation, at the Summer School on Climate at Ghent University.
Stalpaert, Christel
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Facts, Fetishes, and the Parliament of Things: Is There any Space for Critique?
Social Epistemology, 2006Bruno Latour equates criticism with an iconoclastic urge that is underpinned by the project of modernity. Latour’s attack on iconoclastic criticism is therefore closely linked to his rejection of the modern framework. This paper examines Latour’s analysis of modernity and the ways in which he connects criticism to the project of modernity.
Amit Prasad
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The Arboreal Empire and the ‘Parliament of Things’: Australian Trees in Colonial South India
Global Environment, 2020Abstract In the second half of the nineteenth century India and Australia were linked through a series of ecological exchanges, among the most important of which was the introduction of such Australian trees as eucalyptus, casuarina and acacia.
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Democratic design experiments: between parliament and laboratory
For more than four decades, participatory design has provided exemplars and concepts for understanding the democratic potential of design participation.
Thomas Binder, Eva Brandt, Pelle Ehn
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