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Green Dreamer: Seeding change towards collective healing, sustainability, regeneration

392) Eben Kirksey: Boundless entanglements with the virosphere

Green Dreamer: Seeding change towards collective healing, sustainability, regeneration

Kaméa Chayne

Earth Sciences, Philosophy, Society & Culture, Science

4.8694 Ratings

🗓️ 23 March 2023

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“I like thinking with viruses because they’re constantly infecting us, changing our nature. Some of them are even changing our genome. We’re constantly in relation with the world around us even though we can barely perceive and understand all of this complexity.”

In this episode, we are joined by anthropologist Eben Kirksey, who invites us to think and feel through a new wave of viral theory through a lens of multi-species entanglement. Through his insatiable curiosity about nature-culture, Eben humbly approaches the viral world as one that reflects the limitations of fixed or reductive categorization. Ultimately, he leaves us with an invitation to explore how radically re-thinking viral systems can offer alternative ways of approaching contemporary socio-political predicaments. He asks: how can we sit with the complexities of symbiotic assemblages amongst species, and what novel relationships are imperative to uplift in an age of extinction?

About the guest:

Eben Kirksey is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Oxford where he teaches Medical Anthropology and Human Ecology. He earned his PhD at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and helped found one of the world's first Environmental Humanities programs at UNSW Sydney in Australia. Investigating some of the most important stories of our time—related to biotechnology, the environment, and social justice—led him to Asia, the Pacific, and the Americas. His books include Freedom in Entangled Worlds (2012) and Emergent Ecologies (2015)–plus The Multispecies Salon (2014), and The Mutant Project (2020), a book that follows some of the world’s first genetically modified people.

(The musical offering featured in this episode Lose My Mind by RVBY MY DEAR. The episode-inspired artwork is by Luci Pina.)

Green Dreamer is a community-supported podcast. Join our Patreon and contribute a gift of any amount today to help keep our platform alive: greendreamer.com/support

Transcript

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0:00.0

I have a quick but important ask. As you're probably aware, Green Dreamer is an independent

0:07.9

podcast and we don't take on corporate advertisers to fund our work because we don't want those

0:13.7

considerations to influence our curiosities or our abilities to question whatever it is that we want to question.

0:22.3

So if you value and believe in our work, this is our call out.

0:26.8

We need your direct support in order to continue this podcast.

0:30.7

And you can help us out so, so much through a paid substack subscription to my newsletter at

0:37.3

camaya.substack.com or through a one-time

0:40.4

donation at greendreamer.com slash support. It really means a lot to have you here and we're so

0:47.6

grateful for whatever form or level of support that you're able to share with us.

0:56.0

You're listening to Green Dreamer, a listener-supported podcast, and I'm your host, Kameh Shane.

1:02.0

As we embark on a new year for the show, we would love to invite you to join our Patreon community,

1:08.0

where we'll begin to share bonus episode offerings, some of my own reflections

1:11.9

on these conversations, and more. If you've been with us for a while, you also know that we

1:17.3

often explore ideas and perspectives that go against mainstream currents in order to seed more

1:23.2

imaginative thinking for what could be. So if you value our platform and curiosities and intention

1:29.3

and want to support us to break through the noise of mainstream media, join us today on Patreon

1:35.0

at greendreamer.com slash support.

1:41.1

Primatologist would tell us stories about the behaviors that we've inherited from our primate ancestors.

1:48.0

But I like thinking with viruses because they're constantly infecting us, changing our nature.

1:54.0

Some of them, like retroviruses, are even changing our genome.

1:58.0

So we're really constantly in relation with the worlds around us, even though we can

2:02.5

barely perceive and understand all of this complexity.

...

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