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‘Survival Tools of the Anthropocene': Islandness and Resilience in Saoirse Higgins’ Pap-ØY-cene

Producción científica: Article

Resumen

Names are important. Our current geological epoch may now be widely known as the Anthropocene, but this designation is layered with assumptions[i]. Critics of the term have disputed its foregrounding of the Anthropos, and the essentially western, male, colonial perspective it invokes. A range of counter-terms have been suggested. In her audio-visual exhibition at the Pier Arts Centre, Orkney, this summer, Saoirse Higgins offers another alternative: the Pap-Øy-cene.

The exhibition comprises installations in a range of media, from time lapse films to sculptural pieces, original archival material and artefacts. It documents research undertaken for ‘Survival Tools of the Anthropocene’, a practice-based PhD carried out at Glasgow School of Art and completed in 2020. This drew upon three years of intensive fieldwork by Higgins on the island of Papa Westray – or Papay as it’s known locally – in Orkney. Her process-driven practice explores islandness as a context for building sustainable futures, presenting a much-needed counterpoint to the usual ‘mainland’ thinking about the Anthropocene.
Idioma originalEnglish
PublicaciónThe Drouth
EstadoPublished - 3 nov 2021

ODS de las Naciones Unidas

Este resultado contribuye a los siguientes Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible

  1. Quality education
    Quality education
  2. Sustainable cities and communities
    Sustainable cities and communities
  3. Responsible consumption and production
    Responsible consumption and production
  4. Life below water
    Life below water
  5. Life on land
    Life on land

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