A lecture and workshop hosted by the Oxford Penn Toronto International Doctoral Cluster
About this event
The collapse of Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier—forecast to occur before the end of the decade—could raise global sea level by three metres. The grounding line, eroded by currents of warm water, is arguable the most important place on Earth right now, yet it lies a kilometre beneath the ice’s surface and 7,000 kilometres from the nearest human settlement.
Thwaites shows that we need stories that reveal what is happening far from where humans live, but in places where humans are highly active. Drawing on recent trends in environmental literature and on my own experience in writing about what legacies we are leaving for the very deep future (in Footprints: In Search of Future Fossils), in this talk I will explore the challenges of telling Anthropocene stories.
Please note, there are readings available for this event. Please email torch@humanities.ox.ac.uk with evidence of registration to receive these readings.
Registration closes 2 hours before the start of the event. You will be sent the link within 48 hours of the event.