Arts, sciences and climate change: practices and politics at the threshold

Gabrys, Jennifer and Yusoff, Kathryn. 2012. Arts, sciences and climate change: practices and politics at the threshold. Science as Culture, 21(1), pp. 1-24. ISSN 0950-5431 [Article]

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Abstract or Description

Within climate change debates, writers and scholars have called for expanded methods for producing science, for proposing strategies for mitigation and adaptation, and for engaging with publics. Arts-sciences discourses are one area in which increasing numbers of practitioners and researchers are exploring ways in which interdisciplinarity may provide a space for reconsidering the role of cultural and creative responses to environmental change. Yet what new perspectives does the arts-science intersection offer for rethinking to climate change? Which historic conjunctions of arts-sciences are most useful to consider in relation to present-day practices, or in what ways do these previous alignments significantly shift in response to climate change? The uncertainty, contingency, and experimentation necessarily characteristic of climate change may generate emergent forms of practice that require new approaches—not just to arts and sciences, but also at the new thresholds, or ‘meetings and mutations’ that these practices cross. Thresholds—narrated here through the figure of ‘zero degrees’—offer a way to bring together sites of encounter, transformations, uncertainties, future scenarios, material conditions and political practices in relation to climate change. Such shifting thresholds and relations lead not to fundamental re-definitions or demarcations of arts and sciences, arguably, but rather to shared encounters with politics. Drawing on philosophies of aesthetics and sciences elaborated by Jacques Rancière (2004) and Isabelle Stengers (2000), we point to the ways in which political possibility is entangled with aesthetic-material conditions and practices, and how recognition of these interrelations might enable ‘collective experimentation’ (Latour 2004a) within both creative practices and climate sciences.

This paper was first published online 14 April 2011 (iFirst)

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1080/09505431.2010.550139

Keywords:

Climate change; practices of arts and sciences; politics; thresholds; ‘collective experiment’

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Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Sociology

Dates:

DateEvent
2012Published
14 April 2011Published Online

Funders:

Funding bodyFunder IDGrant Number
Cultivation Research Fund, Department of Design, GoldsmithsUNSPECIFIED
Research Leave, Research Office, GoldsmithsUNSPECIFIED

Item ID:

4494

Date Deposited:

27 May 2011 09:23

Last Modified:

02 Mar 2023 11:05

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/4494

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