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Emily Baker (UCL): Possible Worlds: Contemporary Latin American Ecological Fiction

Dates:7 February 2024
Times:17:00 - 18:30
What is it:Seminar
Organiser:School of Arts, Languages and Cultures
Who is it for:University staff, External researchers, Current University students
Speaker:Emily Baker
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  • In category "Seminar"
  • In group "(ALC) Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies"
  • In group "(ALC) Spanish Portuguese and Latin American Studies"
  • By School of Arts, Languages and Cultures

Part of the Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies research seminar series.

This event will be face to face, in Samuel Alexander A116. But it can also be followed online: https://zoom.us/j/95860231166

Abstract: One of the key questions at the heart of ecological fiction is: what is the relationship between language/culture and 'the real'. The anthropologist Anna Tsing argues that: 'To appreciate the patchy unpredictability associated with our current condition, we need to reopen our imaginations'. For Eduardo Kohn in his seminal work How Forests Think, 'language is nested within broader forms of representation that have their own distinctive properties ... open to the emerging worlds around us'. This presentation examines work that engages with the question of the interface between representation and 'the real' explicitly and self-reflexively. Drawing upon case studies from contemporary Latin American ecofiction, this presentation will primarily focus upon two very different novels as a function of the 'possible' or 'emerging' worlds that they stage. The first is El camino de Ida/The Way Out (2013) the last novel written before his death by the canonical Argentine author Ricardo Piglia; a realist campus novel set in a fictionalised version of Princeton where the author worked, which tells the story of the U.S. domestic terrorist the Unabomber, with an ecological slant. The second is La mucama de Omicunlé/Tentacle (2015) by queer Dominican author Rita Indiana. This speculative fiction sets out a near possible future of ecological disaster with the opportunity for a character to travel back in time and prevent that future from playing out. Despite pertaining to different literary genres, I argue that both demonstrate that culture is the privileged terrain upon which ecological crisis is negotiated.

Speaker

Emily Baker

Role: Lecturer in Comparative Literature and Latin American Studies

Organisation: UCL

  • https://www.ucl.ac.uk/european-languages-culture/people/emily-baker

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A116
Samuel Alexander Building
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Ignacio Aguiló

ignacio.aguilo@manchester.ac.uk

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