Suggestions for future field campuses
danicaThe immersion into various spaces within St. Louis was incredibly insightful for rapid learning about the area's past, present, and imagined futures. What I think might have strengthened the field campus as a learning/thinking space would be to have slightly more structure in terms of explicitly creating shared analytical space--for instance, being more consistent with interrogating the space with the 12 scale questions (perhaps different groups could be assigned to paying special attention to a subset of those and then we could come together as a large group or as shuffled groups, i.e. a member from each subset) to discuss. Along those lines as well, I think creating specific times for reflecting and debriefing, either after a site visit or two or at the end of each day, would be an effective way to help translate massive amounts of observational data (so many of us listening/observing in each place!) into meaningful shared insights.
For future field schools I also think it would be important to think about accessibility, not just in terms of content (which is also an important question, since it seems we want to engage with folks across disciplines and beyond academia) but also in terms of format, so as to anticipate and/or be prepared to adjust to the needs of potential participants.
Participation in River School Open Seminar
danicaI would like to utilize the Open Seminar conference calls as an analytical space in which sharing data across spaces can help us see our own fieldsites in better relief. Additionally, I am looking forward to learning from participants with other expertise and/or who are trained to look for/attend to facets of quotidian anthropocenes that may currently fall within my own blindspots.
I would also like to think creatively with other participants to what kinds of action and output we can have moving forward in terms of characterizing the anthropocene and engaging with actors in different spaces, including New Orleans.
Additionally (see my comments on suggestions for future field campuses), perhaps the Open Seminar can be a space to think explicitly about pedagogy--for ourselves, i.e. via collaborative design of shared analytic approaches at future field schools, as well as for thinking about how to educate others, within academic institutions (e.g. undergrads) and beyond.
Interview Emily Catedral (St. Louis Map Room)
This is an interview with map room facilitator Emily Catedral. The interview was conducted by Danica Loucks and filmed by Tim Schütz.
About the Quotitidan Anthropocene Project
This artifact summarizes the Quotidan Anthropcene Project.
This document provides a brief summary of the International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters and shows the Table of Contents and abstracts for a special issue published in March 2019, Inno