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    From a Living Exhibition to the DMZ

    The Shape of a Practice Discourse Program

    Presentations
    With Myung-Ae Choi, Jahnavi Phalkey & Madhushree Kamak
    Moderated by Christoph Rosol

    Making space for studying Anthropocene related changes can occur intentionally through the creation of institutions and other projects but can just as easily occur by coincidence. These two case studies exemplify how different types of spaces, both intentional and accidental, come to form the many areas in which Anthropocene related research is able to happen.

    Jahnavi Phalkey and Madhshree Kamak (Science Gallery Bengaluru) present their creation of “living exhibitions” that expand boundaries of research through atypical collaborations that draw in the greater public for conversations about contemporary issues. By contrast, political ecologist Myung-Ae Choi discusses her research into human-crane entanglements with digital technology being used to aid rewilding processes in an accidental conservation zone that has emerged in the DMZ between North and South Korea.

    The event will be streamed via The Shape of a Practice online environment: http://shape.anthropocene-curriculum.org

    • Friday, Oct 30, 2020
      11:30 am - 12:10 pm

      Technological DMZ: Digital technologies and the conservation of cranes

      Online
    • 12:10 pm - 12:50 pm

      Living Exhibitions: Science Gallery Bengaluru’s Shape of Practice

      Online