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ACHSUKCHAPTER  March 2024

ACHSUKCHAPTER March 2024

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Subject:

War & Water: a seminar on toxicity, multispecies politics and waterways with Matthew Leep, Ifor Duncan, and Stefanos Levidis

From:

Zsuzsanna Ihar <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

ACHS UK Chapter <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 4 Mar 2024 15:54:33 +0000

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text/plain

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*Apologies for cross-posting*

Dear All,

CRASSH research network Military Surplus is hosting its final hybrid seminar of term this Thursday (7 March, 5-7PM GMT), titled ‘War & Water: a seminar on toxicity, multispecies politics and waterways'. We'll hear from Prof. Matthew Leep (Western Governors University), Prof. Ifor Duncan  (Centre for Research Architecture, Department of Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths University), and Prof. Stefanos Levidis (Forensic/Counter Investigations, Goldsmiths University). The seminar will examine the entanglement of two separate waterways within a violent assemblage of military arms development, border-policing, and territorialisation. The first paper will connect an Alaskan estuary, Eagle River Flats, to the Iraq War, via white phosphorus munitions testing, whilst the second paper will trace the militarised fluvial frontiers of the Evros/Meriç/Maritsa river and its relationship with EU anti-migrant politics. Zsuzsanna Ihar (Department of History and Philosophy of Science, Cambridge) will act as discussant. 

Please find abstracts below:

Matthew Leep
‘Toxic entanglements: multispecies politics, white phosphorus, and the Iraq War in Alaska.’

How do toxic pasts shape the multispecies politics of wartime? During the Iraq War, the U.S. military held public hearings about increasing the use of an Alaskan estuary located within a military base—a multispecies space polluted by decades of white phosphorus munitions. The estuary was ancestrally meaningful to migratory birds yet also viewed as central to the production of rapidly deployable combat troops in Iraq. Articulations of estuarian space as ‘wartime’, therefore, conflicted with notions of ‘avian time’ – migratory moments of building nests and raising the next generation of birds. Advancing a multispecies form of inquiry into public hearings and the experience of northern pintails and tundra swans, my article addresses the following questions: How should the toxic encounters of birds in Alaska shape our understanding of the ‘time’ of the Iraq War? How might perspectives on avian experiences complicate our thinking about the spatial and sensory meanings of wartime violence?

Ifor Duncan & Stefanos Levidis
‘Weaponising a river / Median Line: a century of border violence and the alluvial geopolitics of the Evros/Meriç/Maritsa River border’.

This media lecture focuses on the case of the Evros, Meriç, Martisa river – ‘land’ border between Greece, Turkey and Bulgaria – and its production as a border technology. From its main course to its delta, this fluvial frontier is weighted with the crossings of asylum seekers and systematic pushbacks. The river-border technology incorporates the entire hydrology of the river ecosystem, from the deadly velocities of the central course, through its muds, fogs, and flood defence walls that mark the military buffer zone that surrounds it (Zoni Asfaleias Prokalypsis (ZAP)). State impunity is in part produced by the ZAP’s enfolding of the excess of floodwaters into the excesses of sovereign territorial power.

After a century of fluvio-geomorphological change since demarcation in 1926 the borderised river simultaneously riverises the border. In this way the river border is a dynamic archive of the military calculations and geopolitical decisions that make its properties treacherous as an increasingly perilous migration route. Here beatings are customary, mobile phones and official documentation are thrown into the river, and, after seasonal floods, bodies wash up in the delta. In its waters and in its sediments the river border is both a weapon and an archive of the reproduction of deadly exclusionary policies enacted at the watery edges of the EU.

-------

Register via the link below if you intend to attend the talk online or simply drop by the Alison Richard Building (Cambridge) this coming Thursday. 

https://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/41076/

Kind regards,

Zsuzsanna (on behalf of the Military Surplus Research Network)

Zsuzsanna Dominika Ihar (she/her)
PhD Candidate & Gates Scholar
History and Philosophy of Science
University of Cambridge
@zsuzsannaihar

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