ICSCP Spring 2021 Speaker Series: Miriam Ticktin

April 21, 12:00pm - 1:15pm
Mānoa Campus, East-West Center Burns Hall 2045

This talk will discuss a set of ethical-political configurations that are increasingly emerging in cities – they take the shape of what Ticktin calls a decolonial, feminist commons. In the face of extreme inequality and disenfranchisement, people are coming together in various ways to challenge regimes of private property, and to enact new forms of horizontal, structural care (which differ significantly from humanitarian care). Dr. Ticktin will discuss several such commoning practices, which include the occupations of public spaces and buildings by undocumented migrants, forms of mutual aid such as free fridges and stores, and affective and political configurations that respond to the Covid19 pandemic, often inspired by the Movement for Black Lives. The goal is to think about a non-innocent ethics and politics of living together in a world where –as Covid19 has rendered clear -- we are in a life-and-death embrace with each other that no one can escape.


Ticket Information
Register at: https://hawaii.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_hehVxn3MSduDjkedNEV6YQ

Event Sponsor
International Cultural Studies, Mānoa Campus

More Information
(808) 944-7593, culture@hawaii.edu

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