
Seeds from a Seed's Perspective: A Lecture & Discussion with Eric Sanderson
Seeds from a Seed's Perspective: A Lecture & Discussion with Eric Sanderson
Insights on the Movement of Plant Propagules by Indigenous People, Other People, and Others in the Landscape that became New York (Welikia)
Eric Sanderson has been working for nearly twenty-five years to understand the historical ecology of New York City, deriving insights relevant to conservation, urban planning, resilience, and epistemological issues, such as: what does it mean to be a New Yorker? How do you get here? How do you get away? Here we take the seed’s perspective on these questions and examine the processes by which we can understand the historical landscape before New York, what it meant for seeds and their movement, and how those movements changed in a landscape long stewarded by the Indigenous Lenape people to one controlled by the Dutch and English settlers to the our modern American metropolis.
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Film Screening: Naeem Mohaiemen's Jole Dobe Na (2020)
Still from Mohaiemen’s Jole Dobe Na (2020).
When: 3:30 PM
February 23, 2024
Where: Lifetime Screening Room (5th floor, Dodge Hall)
The Seeds of Diaspora Working Group is excited to announce that their February meeting, a screening of Naeem Mohaiemen's film Jole Dobe Na, is open to attendance by all CSSD affiliates!
Naeem will be in attendance for a discussion of the film after the screening, which will focus on its portrayal of plant life and feeling.
A description of the film is below:
Jole Dobe Na (Those Who Do Not Drown), 64 min, 2020
In an empty hospital in Kolkata, a man confronts protocols of blood samples, a subtly discriminatory office, regulations against bribery, and an abandoned operating theater. There are no doctors, signs of life, or residue of death. His mind is on a loop of the last weeks of his wife’s life, when a quiet argument developed between them. When is the end of medical care, whose life is it anyway? If what use is a science that can detect plant emotions, invent fingerprint technology, but fail to give dignity to the end of life.