Any views expressed within media held on this service are those of the contributors, should not be taken as approved or endorsed by the University, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University in respect of any particular issue.
The Edinburgh Environmental Humanities Network presents researchers within the humanities with a forum in which to engage with each other’s work, to share insights, and develop collaborative partnerships.
 
Petrocultures Conference 2018: Transitions

Petrocultures Conference 2018: Transitions

 

Petrocultures Conference 2018: Transitions poster with oil rigs and wind power in the sea

See: http://petrocultures.com/

Conference Website: https://petrocultures2018.wixsite.com/transition

An International, Multi-Disciplinary Conference on Oil Cultures and Energy Humanities

University of Glasgow
Glasgow, Scotland
Aug 29 – Sep 1
2018

The 2016 Paris Climate Agreement heralded unprecedented international consensus on the need to transition from fossil fuels within the next few decades. The uneven responses from state, corporate, and civil actors across the world clearly signify the challenges – and opportunities – that lie ahead. On the one hand, they demonstrate the enduring power of oil and gas as the industry seeks to adapt to the post-Paris world in various ways – exploration, expansion, technical development, political and media management. On the other, the responses have inaugurated a range of efforts to break free from the ‘lock-in’ of the fossil-fuel system and realize a host of potential alternative scenarios. Any initiatives towards future ‘sustainability’, meanwhile, are contextualized by intensifying claims to energy security, sitting uneasily alongside the reality of rising global energy demand.

Petrocultures is motivated by the core notion that the humanities and social sciences have significant input to add to both knowledge of oil and energy and the irrevocable process of transformation. The international field has grown rapidly since the inaugural conference in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada in 2012, producing scholarly and creative work across numerous platforms, disciplines, genres, and territories. While much work has been done to highlight the social and cultural significance of fossil fuels, the ecological unfeasibility of high-carbon life urgently compels us to think, imagine and realize a world ‘after oil’. The organising theme of Petrocultures 2018 is Transition. We anticipate its cultural interpretation in a variety of ways. The conference will provide an important forum for examining and extending existent framings and sitings of oil and petroculture, while also striving to consider the social, cultural, and aesthetic life of alternative forms of energy, such as wind, solar, and hydro power.

This is the first Petrocultures conference to be held outside North America. Scotland is an excellent location from which to contemplate the petrocultural and beyond. The country’s relationship with its offshore oil industry offers a rich backdrop for examining all the contradictions and controversies, opportunities and challenges oil has presented to modern petroculture and the world-ecological condition it has fostered. As a relatively late site of oil and gas extraction, Scotland has always been acutely perceptive of the inevitable ‘ends’ of oil. Much recent focus has been on the reality of decommissioning its petro-infrastructure, and the social consequences of this event. Attempts to become a leading site of renewable energy have been accompanied by bold climate policy initiatives. Illuminating parallels can be drawn, therefore, between Scotland’s experience and that of other key oil-sites, from Ireland, Canada and Norway to the Netherlands and the City of London, but also with emergent low-carbon initiatives seeking to install a culture of transition, across the continent and the globe.

​Petrocultures 2018 will bring together scholars, policy-makers, industry employees, artists, and public advocacy groups from across Europe, North America, and beyond. Confirmed Speakers include:

Dominic Boyer (Professor of Anthropology and Director, CENHS, Rice University)
Sharae Deckard (School of English, Drama and Film, University College Dublin)
Jeff Diamanti (Faculty of Humanities, University of Amsterdam)
Cymene Howe (Dept. of Anthropology and Director, CSWGS, Rice University)
Andreas Malm (Human Geography, Lund University)
Miranda Pennell (Artist and Filmmaker)
Renata Tyszczuk (School of Architecture, University of Sheffield)
Laura Watts (Science and Technology Studies, IT University of Copenhagen)

We seek proposals for papers, workshops, and special panels that address themes related to transition and/or petrocultures more generally. We are open to innovative formats. Papers and panels can be academic, creative, or any combination of the two. We ask that paper proposals be no more than 200 words in length, and that panel proposals have a 200-word description of the topic along with a list of paper titles. All submissions must include a 100-word biographical statement for each presenter. Please send proposals as soon as possible, but no later than February 2nd, 2018.

Topics this conference will explore include, but are not limited to:

oil / energy’s cultural imaginaries
transition culture / cultural registrations of energy transition and decarbonisation
histories / futures of transition
the end(s) of oil / representing petrofutures / low-carbon imaginaries
oil’s cultural geographies / spaces and sites of extraction, production, circulation, consumption
imagining and representing alternative energy: the narratives/poetics/aesthetics of wind/tidal/solar/hydro/bio-/thermal/
oil / energy and the anthropocene / capitalocene
infrastructure
cultural / activist interventions
energopower / the culture, (bio)politics, and economics of oil/energy in an age of transition
material / immaterial oil – financial / environmental / embodied / psychic /affective cultures of oil / energy
waste / plastic / lubricity
energy and climate – history, realism, speculation, apocalypse
theorising ‘renewable culture’ / cultural renewal
oil / energy utopias / dystopias
documenting / curating / archiving / modelling / philosophising / designing petroculture / transition
creative resources – producing energy art / theatre / literature / film
digital resources
the energy commons / energy and environmental law / justice
oil / energy and world-ecology
representing mobility
oil / energy and the state / industry
oil / energy and gender / sexuality
oil / energy and labour / work in transition / energy and social reproduction
community responses / creative initiatives to energy transition
UK / European / Scottish histories / registrations of petroculture

Please send proposals and biographical info as soon as possible, but no later than February 2nd, 2018 to petrocultures2018@gmail.com

Organising Committee: Dr Graeme Macdonald (University of Warwick); Professor Janet Stewart (Durham University); Dr Rhys Williams (University of Glasgow)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

css.php

Report this page

To report inappropriate content on this page, please use the form below. Upon receiving your report, we will be in touch as per the Take Down Policy of the service.

Please note that personal data collected through this form is used and stored for the purposes of processing this report and communication with you.

If you are unable to report a concern about content via this form please contact the Service Owner.

Please enter an email address you wish to be contacted on. Please describe the unacceptable content in sufficient detail to allow us to locate it, and why you consider it to be unacceptable.
By submitting this report, you accept that it is accurate and that fraudulent or nuisance complaints may result in action by the University.

  Cancel