Agential Realism
Intra-action
barad
Future Becomings
Material Realism
Climate Change mitigation policies
Hekman
Colebrook
Transformation
Grosz
Ontology
Body & Culture
Material Agency
Ontology is the nature of being to which it is argued that feminist ontology integrates material realism of or existence and the discursive way we talk and understand our existence forms a ballast for feminist theory. The material reality of climate change is an ontological crisis of what the world is and can be. Policies regarding it has to grounded in the lived material reality of bodies and environments affected. The consequences of climate change: droughts, floods, health crises are not just tangible but are fundamental shifts of existence.
The theorism of becoming and zones of instability and transformation challenges the approach of climate change policies on the future. It shifts the focus of trying to "fix" or go back to a past environment to focusing on the potential of life and its dynamics and unpredictability in ecological and social systems. Policies such as deforestation could unintentionally hinder future possibilites and the evolution of both human societies and natural ecologies. This leads to the overall recognition that matter is not static but always in a state of becoming.
Moves beyond seeing the economic and environmental impact on climate change mitigitation policies, but focuses on how the policies directly and materially impacts the transformative bodies as active, evolving matter. The thinking of how pollution, noise, or altered local climate of infrasturcutre and construction affects the communties nearby insists that there is material vulnterability of bodies to which it is not a blank slate for culture to write upon but rather it is shaped dyanmically and actively. This could explain diseases and altered developments that transformed human and nonhuman bodies at fundamental levels.
Migitation policies should not be viewed as human actions on a passive environment where one thing affects the other, rather it should be viewed as everything from technology, people, and the environment are intra-acting with one another because it is all entangled and influences one another constantly. This thinking brings an ethical focus on the agential cuts where these actions can create boundaries of unfairly distributed consequences amongst different communties and parts of nature.
Climate Change mitigation policies
Ny'La Nelson
Created on October 21, 2025
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Transcript
Agential Realism
Intra-action
barad
Future Becomings
Material Realism
Climate Change mitigation policies
Hekman
Colebrook
Transformation
Grosz
Ontology
Body & Culture
Material Agency
Ontology is the nature of being to which it is argued that feminist ontology integrates material realism of or existence and the discursive way we talk and understand our existence forms a ballast for feminist theory. The material reality of climate change is an ontological crisis of what the world is and can be. Policies regarding it has to grounded in the lived material reality of bodies and environments affected. The consequences of climate change: droughts, floods, health crises are not just tangible but are fundamental shifts of existence.
The theorism of becoming and zones of instability and transformation challenges the approach of climate change policies on the future. It shifts the focus of trying to "fix" or go back to a past environment to focusing on the potential of life and its dynamics and unpredictability in ecological and social systems. Policies such as deforestation could unintentionally hinder future possibilites and the evolution of both human societies and natural ecologies. This leads to the overall recognition that matter is not static but always in a state of becoming.
Moves beyond seeing the economic and environmental impact on climate change mitigitation policies, but focuses on how the policies directly and materially impacts the transformative bodies as active, evolving matter. The thinking of how pollution, noise, or altered local climate of infrasturcutre and construction affects the communties nearby insists that there is material vulnterability of bodies to which it is not a blank slate for culture to write upon but rather it is shaped dyanmically and actively. This could explain diseases and altered developments that transformed human and nonhuman bodies at fundamental levels.
Migitation policies should not be viewed as human actions on a passive environment where one thing affects the other, rather it should be viewed as everything from technology, people, and the environment are intra-acting with one another because it is all entangled and influences one another constantly. This thinking brings an ethical focus on the agential cuts where these actions can create boundaries of unfairly distributed consequences amongst different communties and parts of nature.