S10E6 - Latin America, the Caribbean, and Plural Worlds of Disaster Thinking

S10E6 - Latin America, the Caribbean, and Plural Worlds of Disaster Thinking

Episode overview Episode 6 marks a shift in Season 10 from thematic conversations to regional perspectives, focusing on Latin America (and the Caribbean) as rich sites of critical disaster thinking. The episode foregrounds intellectual traditions that challenge Eurocentric assumptions in disaster studies and emphasizes plurality, dialogue, and the politics of knowledge production.

Hosts

  • Jason von Meding

  • Ksenia Chmutina

Guests

  • Giovanni Gugg — cultural anthropologist and lecturer in urban anthropology, working on risk cultures, disaster response, and activism in vulnerable urban territories

  • Anna Süsina — Lecturer in Media and Creative Industries, Loughborough University; scholar of communication, social change, participatory media, and power asymmetries

  • Victor Marchezini — sociologist at the Brazilian Early Warning Center and professor at INPE; leading voice in the sociology of disasters in Brazil

Key themes

  • Latin American and Indigenous intellectual traditions in disaster studies

  • Reading beyond English-language and Eurocentric canons

  • Development, coloniality, and the production of vulnerability

  • Plural futures, pluriverses, and alternative ontologies

  • Dialogue, pedagogy, and critical hope

  • Translation, language, and epistemic justice

  • Activism, civic responsibility, and scholarship

Core discussion highlights

  • Guests reflect on their reading practices, emphasizing podcasts, oral traditions, hard-copy books, and texts emerging from social movements, Indigenous communities, and Latin American critical scholarship.

  • Victor Marchezini discusses the influence of Paulo Freire, highlighting dialogue, pedagogy, oppression in everyday life, and the importance of critical hope in teaching, research, and disaster practice.

  • Giovanni explores Arturo Escobar’s critique of development and his concept of the pluriverse, applying it to disaster risk and urbanization around Mount Vesuvius. Disaster planning is framed as a cultural and political process, not only a technical one.

  • Anna Süsina reflects on Indigenous thinking through Ailton Krenak, emphasizing relational worldviews, the human–non-human relationship, and the idea that the dominant relationship with Earth is itself a disaster.

  • The conversation challenges the asymmetry between “scientific” and Indigenous knowledge, arguing for equal legitimacy and meaningful translation rather than extraction or tokenism.

  • Translation is discussed as both a political challenge and a creative possibility—across languages, disciplines, generations, and even between humans and non-humans.

  • The guests collectively stress the dangers of time compression in disaster scholarship, where urgency crowds out long-term thinking, historical analysis, and ethical engagement.

Jaksot(100)

S8E2 - Anarchism

S8E2 - Anarchism

Today we continue our explorations under the theme of solidarity! We are so pleased to be in conversation with Dr. Alexandre Christoyannopoulos, who is a Reader in Politics and International Relations...

24 Tammi 202345min

S8E1 - What is Solidarity?

S8E1 - What is Solidarity?

We are so happy to wish you all a Happy New Year and welcome you back for Season 8 of Disasters: Deconstructed!!!  We can't wait to spend time with you again - or for the first time - as we explore wh...

9 Tammi 202334min

Christmas Special 2022

Christmas Special 2022

Thank you all so much for joining us again or for the first time in 2022 - We hope you enjoyed seasons 6 and 7 and and learned a thing or two like we did! Thanks to all of our amazing guests and frien...

3 Tammi 202350min

S7E9 - Season Wrap

S7E9 - Season Wrap

Thank you all for joining us for another Season of Disasters: Deconstructed! We appreciate everyone who listens and engages, joins our livestreams, and of course the amazing guests who bring fresh ide...

2 Tammi 202337min

S7E8 - Reading Patriarchy of The Wage

S7E8 - Reading Patriarchy of The Wage

Today Ksenia, Jason and Camillo are joined by Dr Maha Shuayb to read our final book of the season, "Patriarchy of the Wage" by Silvia Federici. Thanks to everyone for joining us in reading critical li...

31 Joulu 202242min

S7E7 - Reading Pedagogy of Indignation

S7E7 - Reading Pedagogy of Indignation

Today Ksenia, Jason and Camillo are joined by Dr Estella Carpi to read "Pedagogy of Indignation" by Paulo Freire. Thanks to everyone for joining us in reading critical literature to inform disaster st...

30 Joulu 202250min

S7E6 - Reading Pollution Is Colonialism

S7E6 - Reading Pollution Is Colonialism

Today Ksenia, Jason and Camillo are joined by Dr Noémie Bautista Gonzalez to read "Pollution is Colonialism" by Max Liboiron. Thanks to everyone for joining us in reading critical literature to inform...

13 Joulu 202249min

S7E5 - Reading Decolonial Ecology

S7E5 - Reading Decolonial Ecology

In this episode we sit with Camillo Boano to discuss our reading of Malcom Ferdinand’s “Decolonial Ecology: Thinking from the Caribbean World”. Thanks to everyone for joining us in reading critical li...

6 Joulu 202243min

Suosittua kategoriassa Tiede

tiedekulma-podcast
rss-mita-tulisi-tietaa
rss-duodecim-lehti
mielipaivakirja
rss-poliisin-mieli
docemilia
radio-antro
utelias-mieli
filocast-filosofian-perusteet
rss-ranskaa-raakana
rss-metsantuntijat-podcast
rss-tiedetta-vai-tarinaa
rss-ylistys-elaimille
rss-lihavuudesta-podcast
rss-sosiopodi