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Transplanetary Ecologies Reading Group

02 December 2022, 4:00 pm–5:00 pm

a paint splodge that looks like a planet

How do the various infrastructures of space science exact their own ecological tolls? How do contemporary configurations of (neo)colonial power, engendered by progress-oriented visions of contemporary space industries, shape our understanding of extra-terrestrial environments? What forms of (trans)planetary ecologies are needed to account for the imaginaries, materialities and entanglements brought about by space science? What do increasing calls for space sustainability mean in practice? 

Event Information

Open to

All

Organiser

Rachel Hill and Makar Tereshin

Continuous human presence in Low Earth Orbit, increasing expansion of techno-scientific infrastructures beyond Earth, and the extractivist ambitions of the commercial 'New Space' sector call for a reconsideration of the conventional analytical frameworks used to describe emergent (extra)terrestrial political, ecological, and social processes. The Transplanetary Ecologies reading group will interrogate this emerging paradigm, asking questions such as: how do the various infrastructures of space science exact their own ecological tolls? How do contemporary configurations of (neo)colonial power, engendered by progress-oriented visions of contemporary space industries, shape our understanding of extraterrestrial environments? What forms of (trans)planetary ecologies are needed to account for the imaginaries, materialities and entanglements brought about by space science? What do increasing calls for space sustainability mean in practice? 

Over the academic year 2022/2023 we will gather to discuss these questions and more. Our reading group is open to all, irrespective of your level of space related knowledge.

Our second session will take place on zoom on Friday, December 2nd at 4pm GMT/UTC. Our text this month will be ‘Extreme: Limits and Horizons in the Once and Future Cosmos’ by David Valentine, Valerie A. Olson and Debbora Battaglia. This article can be found online – if you have any difficulty finding it, please email the reading group conveners Makar: makar.tereshin.21@ucl.ac.uk and Rachel: rachel.hill.21@ucl.ac.uk for assistance.

Please email Rachel and/or Makar for the zoom link.

Reading suggestions welcome!