WHAT'S ON

Events open to the public from the University of Cambridge

Submit events
 

Talks

In Conversation: The American Feminist Art Movement & its Impact on Contemporary Art

Join us for in-conversation event between Professor Judith K. Brodsky and Dr. Ferris Olin chaired by Marjorie W. Martay at Murray Edwards College.

A split image, one side is an image of an outstretched hand feeding birds and the other is an image of

Storytelling and the Pluriverse

Tue 24 January 2023

Gatsby Room (Chancellor's Centre)

My talk introduces the pluriverse, a “post-development” challenge of universalism in favour of a multiplicity of contingent, commensurate worlds. I will examine the pluriverse in relationship to storytelling amidst ecological collapse. I propose that writing fiction is both an act of bearing witness and of creating reality; indeed, creating reality is fundamentally an act of storytelling, vis a vis the narratives we believe and act upon, and the stories we use to describe being in the world (stories we tell according to our view of the world). I then explore how the radical, "post-development" framework of the pluriverse informs the way we tell and consume fiction in the 21st century, and to what ends. The kinds of stories that may offer humans hope and justice, and help us navigate ecological collapse, may have less to do with “realistic” and sobering/cautionary apocalyptic and dystopian fictional worlds than with a view of the world that the pluriverse helps describe: one that emphasizes profound relationality (as is fundamental among many Indigenous and in Zen Buddhist worldviews, for example), and that does not presuppose a single Euromodern ontology, but instead understands reality as constituted by many worlds, kinds of worlds, ontologies, ways of being, ways of knowing, and ways of experiencing these worlds.


Speaker:
Dr Bonnie Nadzam is an American writer and Zen Buddhist priest. Her poetry, essays and fiction have appeared in Harper’s, Orion Magazine, The Iowa Review, and many other journals and magazines. Her first novel, Lamb, was long-listed for the Orange Prize in the UK, recipient of the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize, translated into several languages and made into an award-winning film. Her second novel, Lions, was a finalist for the PEN USA Literary Award in Fiction. She is also co-author of Love in the Anthropocene with Environmental Ethicist Dale Jamieson, and is currently a Research Fellow in with the Harvard Animal Law and Policy Program and Visiting Professor in Ethical Inquiry at Carleton College.


Details:
This is a hybrid event, which will take place in-person in the Gatsby Room (Chancellor's Centre, Wolfson College) and also on Zoom.

If you would like to attend online, please register for the Zoom link: https://wolfson-cam-ac-uk.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAodu2orzwoEtOPZ5KQx3qyHkFoty8TqqsB

For the in-person audience, drinks and snacks will be available after the talk.

Cost: Free

Enquiries and booking

No need to book.

Enquiries: Chantal Holland Website Email: events-coordinator@wolfson.cam.ac.uk

Timing

Live Stream In person

All times

Tue 24 January 2023 5:30PM - 7:00PM

Venue

Address: Gatsby Room (Chancellor's Centre)
Wolfson College
Barton Road
Cambridge
Cambridgeshire
CB3 9BB
United Kingdom
Email: events-coordinator@wolfson.cam.ac.uk
Telephone: +441223335900
Website