Villanova Philosophy Graduate Student Conference: Philosophy, Nature, and Ecology
TBA
800 Lancaster Avenue
Villanova 19010
United States
Speakers:
Organisers:
Topic areas
Talks at this conference
Add a talkDetails
In light of the existential threat posed by ecological breakdown, this conference seeks to provide a space for graduate students to interrogate and reimagine the relationship(s) between society and nature, between socio-political and ecological systems. In doing so, we ask: to what extent is society natural, and nature social? What conceptual, material, and/or philosophical analyzes can be leveraged to recognize and confront the multiple, overlapping ecological crises? What roles and duties do we, as philosophers, have in creating a more sustainable relationship to the earth and to collective needs?
We invite papers from all traditions and global perspectives united by the theme of Philosophy, Nature, and Ecology to contribute to this explicitly pluralist conference. To this end, we welcome submissions that address:
- Eco-Marxism and ecological political economy
- Eco-phenomenology
- Ecological thinking and epistemologies
- Environmental pragmatism
- Indigenous, decolonial, and post-colonial ecological philosophies
- Art, aesthetics, and nature
- Environmental injustice and intersectionality, including but not limited to
Analysis of race, gender, and class
- Science, technology, and production
- Philosophy and natural history
- Anthropocene and Capitalocene
- Anthropocentrism, Biocentrism, and Ecocentrism
- Scarcity and wars over natural resources (eg, soil, water, and food)
- The political status of or ethical duties toward climate refugees
The conference will culminate in a keynote presentation from Dr. Emily Anne Parker from Towson University.
This is a student event (e.g. a graduate conference).
Registration
No
Who is attending?
No one has said they will attend yet.
Will you attend this event?