4.7 • 1.5K Ratings
🗓️ 9 May 2019
⏱️ 117 minutes
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Donna Haraway's work defies disciplines, combining insights from both biology and feminist thought, and drawing on her own involvement in political projects organized around feminism and radical science. Haraway’s most recent book, Staying With the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene, takes up these questions as the fragility of earth’s webs of life is becoming frighteningly and increasingly apparent. What are the ethical and political demands in the face of the most pressing threat of our era—catastrophic climate change? To stay with the trouble, Haraway argues, is to reject technofixes that will save us from doom on the one hand, and on the other, to reject the pessimistic idea that “it’s too late” to make the world better. The book outlines a view of what Haraway calls “multispecies flourishing” and the obstacles to achieving it through theoretical insights and speculative fiction imaginings. Interviewed by Jacobin editorial board member Alyssa Battistoni.
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Alyssa's piece on Haraway for n+1: nplusonemag.com/issue-28/reviews/monstrous-duplicated-potent
Sophie Lewis's critique of Haraway and population politics: viewpointmag.com/2017/05/08/cthulhu-plays-no-role-for-me
The Leap Manifesto: leapmanifesto.org/en/the-leap-manifesto
The Xenofeminist Manifesto: laboriacuboniks.net
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0:00.0 | This episode of The Dig is brought to you by our supporters at patreon.com slash the dig and by n-plus magazine which features some of today's most urgent and exciting political writing |
0:15.8 | essays fiction and cultural criticism on the left including a lot of work |
0:22.0 | authored by guests who have appeared right here on this |
0:25.4 | podcast. N-plus-1's brand-new issue, Headcase, is now available in print and online, and it is full of great pieces that are perfect |
0:37.8 | for dig listeners like you. |
0:41.0 | One that might be of particular interest is Tim Barker's review of former Fed Chair Paul |
0:46.0 | Volker's recent memoir, Keeping at it. |
0:49.9 | In his review, which Cori Robin has, the Best Political Essay of the Year, Barker |
0:56.1 | discusses the massive consequences of the dizzying financialization that began in the late 1970s and challenges the powerful narrative of inevitability |
1:07.9 | surrounding the era of widespread unemployment and deregulation |
1:11.9 | inaugurated by the infamous Volker shock. |
1:15.0 | Instead, Barker argues, an alternative might have been found in an incomes policy, |
1:22.0 | a solution that offers compelling contemporary |
1:24.9 | possibilities for today's debates about job guarantees and other political |
1:30.6 | economic interventions. This month dig listeners can take 25% off a year |
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1:56.8 | all for less than three dollars a month. |
2:00.1 | That's N-P-L-U-S-O-N-E-T-E-N-E-N-E-N-O-N-E-M-A-G. |
2:07.0 | dot com slash The Dig. |
2:20.0 | Welcome to the Dig, a podcast from Jacobin magazine. My name is Daniel Denver and I'm |
2:26.1 | broadcasting from Providence, Rhode Island. Donna Haraway received a PhD in cell biology from Yale in 1972. |
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