Making, Breaking, Reinventing: the Human-Other-Animal Interface in the Anthropocene
Pluralizing the Anthropocene
Pluralizing the Anthropocene
Schedule: 18:00 - 19:30 (UTC)
The session will be in English
Registration: Events will take place online. All welcome but registration required by this link
Events
will take place online. All welcome but registration required

Agustín Fuentes (Princeton University)
Moderators: Gonçalo Santos (CIAS/ Sci-Tech Asia)Ana Luísa Santos (CIAS / University of Coimbra)
The
International Geological Association places the official starting date for the
Anthropocene at 1950. Do the 60% of primates, 30% of amphibians and 21% of fish
species threatened with extinction in 2021 care? Those of us studying the
human/other-animal interface needed no official sanction to denote contemporary
rapid, radical and dramatic ecosystem churning. Human-animal interfaces are not
just a central lens for the Anthropocene; they represent critical ecologies of
hope and despair. But are disciplinary theoretical and methodological
approaches keeping pace with the needs and complexities of these processes and
patterns? Yes and no. In this talk I
argue that while we have made substantive improvements in theory and methods,
historical and traditional commitments to disciplinary silos remain substantive
obstacles to innovation and transformation. We (humans and others) can benefit
from enhanced transdisciplinary, and trans-species, engagement. Here I offer
brief examples from the research into human-primates, human-hyena, human-dog,
and human-elephant interfaces to illustrate that synergies, hybridities, and
contemporary evolutionary theory might be particularly useful in the current
landscapes of the human and others.
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Agustín Fuentes, trained in Zoology and Anthropology, is a Professor of
Anthropology at Princeton University. His research delves into the how and why
of being human. Ranging from chasing monkeys in jungles and cities, to
exploring the lives of our evolutionary ancestors, to examining what people
actually do across the globe, Professor Fuentes is interested in both the big
questions and the small details of what makes humans and our closest relatives
tick. His current projects include exploring cooperation, creativity, and
belief in human evolution, multispecies anthropologies, evolutionary theory and
processes, and engaging race and racism. Fuentes is an active public scientist,
a well-known blogger, lecturer, tweeter and a writer and explorer for National
Geographic. Fuentes’ books include “Race, Monogamy, and other lies they told
you: busting myths about human nature” (U of California), “The Creative Spark:
how imagination made humans exceptional" (Dutton), and “Why We Believe:
evolution and the human way of being” (Yale).