By demonstrating how historical, literary, cultural, philosophical and religious insights are needed in our response to the climate and ecological crises, researchers in the environmental humanities are showing how the humanities can be transformative for understanding the most urgent global issues.
Join Dr Simona Capisani in Durham on Thursday, 28 November from 3:30 to 5 pm, when she will give a talk and host a Q&A regarding her experiences at the UN Biodiversity Conference.
The Environmental Histories and Futures of the North East group offers a platform for connecting heritage and sustainability projects in the North East of England.
Dr Axel Perez Trujillo, Assistant Professor at Durham University's School of Modern Languages and Cultures, explains his research ‘Imagining the Plains of Latin America’, exploring the representations of plains in literature, and the creation of dominant imaginaries of landscapes.
To engage with the current climate crisis is to also consider how our dominant imaginaries of nature validate certain practices throughout the world from intense monoculture to resource extractivism. Identifying such representations is a means of generating interstices through which to allow other modes of knowing and inhabiting the planet. My work continues to shift our attention towards other ways of seeing and imagining the world around us.
Much of the public conversation and research about the relationship between climate change and migration tends to focus heavily on the possibility of mass migration flows across borders. However, this focus often obscures a range of different ways that peoples’ and communities’ mobility can be impacted and thus limits the range of questions we can ask about what justice requires. I argue that such questions require us to consider the concept of livability and what it means to have a right to a livable place and how this right is implicated by the structure of the international state system under conditions of climate and environmental change.
Find out more about Dr Simona Capisani's research interests and work.
The Talking Humanities podcast introduces projects and reflections from researchers across the Arts and Humanities Faculty at Durham University.
Join Simona Capisani, Assistant Professor in Philosophy at Durham University, and Simon James, Professor in Philosophy at Durham University, in their conversation about Environmental Philosophy.
Discover some of Durham University's research centres, initiatives, and projects related to Environmental Humanities.
The MA in Environmental Humanities programme aims to explore how the methods and insights of humanities disciplines can contribute to developing a response to the environmental crisis.
Our research-led education ensures our broad range of courses will challenge and inspire you.
Visit the Transformative Humanities page to find out more about current research projects of other Transformative Humanities strands.
Find out more about the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at Durham University.