Carbon Ruins: Engaging with Post-Fossil Transitions through Participatory World-Building
(2021) In Politics and Governance 9(2). p.87-99- Abstract
- While many pathways to post-fossil futures have been articulated, most fail to engage people in imagining themselves as being part of those futures and involved in the transition. Following recent calls for more immersive experiences, the 2019 initiative “Carbon Ruins—An Exhibition of the Fossil Era” (Carbon Ruins) is a performance set around a historical museum from the future, which uses recognisable, culturally powerful physical objects to bridge the gap between abstract scenarios and everyday experiences. Through its physical presence and extensive media coverage, Carbon Ruins struck a chord with scientists, activists, creative professionals, policy makers, civil society organisations, and the general public. Like other imaginary... (More)
- While many pathways to post-fossil futures have been articulated, most fail to engage people in imagining themselves as being part of those futures and involved in the transition. Following recent calls for more immersive experiences, the 2019 initiative “Carbon Ruins—An Exhibition of the Fossil Era” (Carbon Ruins) is a performance set around a historical museum from the future, which uses recognisable, culturally powerful physical objects to bridge the gap between abstract scenarios and everyday experiences. Through its physical presence and extensive media coverage, Carbon Ruins struck a chord with scientists, activists, creative professionals, policy makers, civil society organisations, and the general public. Like other imaginary worlds, Carbon Ruins is not finished. It is an open-ended process of narrating, imagining, and representing (the transition to) a post-fossil future. In this article we reflect upon Carbon Ruins as a participatory form of world-building that allows for new ways of knowing, and new ways of being, in relation to post-fossil transitions. We discern three different kinds of authorship that were taken on by participants: as originators, dwellers, and explorers. While the originator makes the future world a recognisable place, the dweller can engage active hope in place of a passive sense of urgency, and the explorer can transform resignation into commitment, with a fresh determination to leave the fossil era behind. Situating Carbon Ruins within a critical political tradition, we find post-fossil world-building to be a form of critique that destabilises accustomed ways of thinking and opens up new fields of experience that allows things to be done differently. (Less)
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https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/b25a6206-e2cc-4fca-b5b0-c5b33d68ff35
- author
- Stripple, Johannes LU ; Nikoleris, Alexandra LU and Hildingsson, Roger LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2021
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Politics and Governance
- volume
- 9
- issue
- 2
- pages
- 13 pages
- publisher
- Cogitatio Press
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85105271156
- ISSN
- 2183-2463
- DOI
- 10.17645/pag.v9i2.3816
- project
- Climate Imaginaries: Narrating socio-cultural transitions to a post-fossil society
- LU Futura
- Narrating Climate Futures
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b25a6206-e2cc-4fca-b5b0-c5b33d68ff35
- alternative location
- https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/3816
- date added to LUP
- 2021-04-29 08:17:29
- date last changed
- 2022-11-16 06:59:14
@article{b25a6206-e2cc-4fca-b5b0-c5b33d68ff35, abstract = {{While many pathways to post-fossil futures have been articulated, most fail to engage people in imagining themselves as being part of those futures and involved in the transition. Following recent calls for more immersive experiences, the 2019 initiative “Carbon Ruins—An Exhibition of the Fossil Era” (Carbon Ruins) is a performance set around a historical museum from the future, which uses recognisable, culturally powerful physical objects to bridge the gap between abstract scenarios and everyday experiences. Through its physical presence and extensive media coverage, Carbon Ruins struck a chord with scientists, activists, creative professionals, policy makers, civil society organisations, and the general public. Like other imaginary worlds, Carbon Ruins is not finished. It is an open-ended process of narrating, imagining, and representing (the transition to) a post-fossil future. In this article we reflect upon Carbon Ruins as a participatory form of world-building that allows for new ways of knowing, and new ways of being, in relation to post-fossil transitions. We discern three different kinds of authorship that were taken on by participants: as originators, dwellers, and explorers. While the originator makes the future world a recognisable place, the dweller can engage active hope in place of a passive sense of urgency, and the explorer can transform resignation into commitment, with a fresh determination to leave the fossil era behind. Situating Carbon Ruins within a critical political tradition, we find post-fossil world-building to be a form of critique that destabilises accustomed ways of thinking and opens up new fields of experience that allows things to be done differently.}}, author = {{Stripple, Johannes and Nikoleris, Alexandra and Hildingsson, Roger}}, issn = {{2183-2463}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{2}}, pages = {{87--99}}, publisher = {{Cogitatio Press}}, series = {{Politics and Governance}}, title = {{Carbon Ruins: Engaging with Post-Fossil Transitions through Participatory World-Building}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/pag.v9i2.3816}}, doi = {{10.17645/pag.v9i2.3816}}, volume = {{9}}, year = {{2021}}, }