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Apologies for cross-postings; please contact organizers directly for
inquiries.

https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/news/anthropocene-river-campus-human-delta-new-orleans-nov-10-16-2019

*Deadline May 6, 2019*
*Contact*

For further questions or information, please contact [log in to unmask] (for
international and non-Louisiana US-based applicants) or
[log in to unmask] (for participants based in Louisiana/New Orleans).

Our project *Mississippi. An Anthropocene
<https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/anthropocene?source=feed_text&epa=HASHTAG&__xts__%5B0%5D=68.ARCaeiGTTEuIzjrr2p399boJHM6JIUasRZfEHE9IK1N3B3iF0UpomJBIS7UnYLbO-9AlPTJUXECDAbmvjlnkvz2OD_yW-GkftCARAIElUmSQdVC0RjoCv8U9Bs5JwJPXdfB-hpqZJBDX7y1WCjQCn7yo22vdyGeYNsnEfO0qmEgILAEuNuM1PuexiYtRR9MKDJEN1kXLUuBDpZVcNHm-yhfFjKEkaFTaJNpRmlIp2vekac1ocAxJxUZdxyQLVpRCXGFyN1_zg2iR1jAjANc2jZD96vL9OJRK55bLOos-iBKnH40RPXnPyuMvQzyyPoMWhsTo-sSM78EVvADQKBuoNCAn-JQYRII5Nd0YmZAb6WATflpvQRt_nAxoNqVpSGHmegzm1LKCflrVgZtZaxVDhNQDV42TirtpJO4QogB1pY9BSZKbinRwtCBlKKH1go81EBN1ffqfCuA2ysfvoRVb97_nZLF2Rq2WANAUenrpgFp34-S3L-3ZZfB2_t8&__tn__=%2ANK-R>
River*,
with Haus der Kulturen der Welt
<https://www.facebook.com/hkw.de/?__tn__=K-R&eid=ARDWGFJg8cRwdI1upyT0a1MgCacxOF0GPmN4UUb6rjyuls7ZKwGhHkMVZlzcWeTTObIX88Al5qPcXDRT&fref=mentions&__xts__%5B0%5D=68.ARCaeiGTTEuIzjrr2p399boJHM6JIUasRZfEHE9IK1N3B3iF0UpomJBIS7UnYLbO-9AlPTJUXECDAbmvjlnkvz2OD_yW-GkftCARAIElUmSQdVC0RjoCv8U9Bs5JwJPXdfB-hpqZJBDX7y1WCjQCn7yo22vdyGeYNsnEfO0qmEgILAEuNuM1PuexiYtRR9MKDJEN1kXLUuBDpZVcNHm-yhfFjKEkaFTaJNpRmlIp2vekac1ocAxJxUZdxyQLVpRCXGFyN1_zg2iR1jAjANc2jZD96vL9OJRK55bLOos-iBKnH40RPXnPyuMvQzyyPoMWhsTo-sSM78EVvADQKBuoNCAn-JQYRII5Nd0YmZAb6WATflpvQRt_nAxoNqVpSGHmegzm1LKCflrVgZtZaxVDhNQDV42TirtpJO4QogB1pY9BSZKbinRwtCBlKKH1go81EBN1ffqfCuA2ysfvoRVb97_nZLF2Rq2WANAUenrpgFp34-S3L-3ZZfB2_t8>,
reaches its climax with the Anthropocene River Campus in the delta of New
Orleans (Nov 10–16, 2019). The campus is a one-week educational event
within the framework of *Mississippi. An Anthropocene River* project in
collaboration with the New Orleans Center for the Gulf South (NOCGS
<https://liberalarts.tulane.edu/programs/nocgs>), Tulane University. The
campus offers young artists and scientists opportunities for
interdisciplinary discussions about local and global interactions between
humans and ecosystems.

*Why the Mississippi River Region?*

The Mississippi River region presents a rich example for understanding how
vast abstractions, such as the Anthropocene, land in the everyday lives of
those affected by them. The flows of people, commercial goods, toxins,
material extractions, and histories that the river draws together
demonstrate the interdependence of ways of life, the environment, and the
sociopolitical realities that have come to form its path through the
American continent. The river therefore serves as an ideal setting to
investigate what the Anthropocene means on the level of experience by
framing large-scale ecological changes as they are manifested locally.

*Field-oriented Explorations of Anthropocenic Transformations: An
Anthropocene River Journey*

The objective of the project "Mississippi. An Anthropocene River" is to
make this landscape legible through field-oriented explorations of
anthropocenic transformations. It unpacks the sources of and impacts on the
distinctive ecologies and social realities at the regional level—utilizing five
Anthropocene River Field Stations
<https://www.anthropocene-curriculum.org/pages/root/related-projects/mississippi-an-anthropocene-river/>
located
along the river from Minneapolis to New Orleans. During the fall of 2019,
an Anthropocene River Journey
<https://www.anthropocene-curriculum.org/pages/root/related-projects/mississippi-an-anthropocene-river/call-river-semester/>
will
travel the length of the river, from the headwaters to the Gulf of Mexico,
in order to collect results and create meaningful engagement with local
communities in a broad range of programs both on-site and online. Within
these activities, scholars from many fields, along with experts, artists,
and activists, are working to develop transdisciplinary practices that can
speak to the multifaceted nature of the problems faced en route and the
many vernaculars through which the Anthropocene is expressed.

*Anthropocene River Campus (November 10–16, 2019)*

The project will culminate in an Anthropocene River Campus, which will take
place in New Orleans (November 10–16, 2019). The campus will bring together
the field research and practices developed over the course of the year and
synthesize the findings of the Field Stations to identify the common themes
that have emerged. These common themes will form the basis for six seminars
around which the campus will be structured. The aim is to unfold key
themes—ranging from the flow of commodities, river engineering, and risk
and equity to clashing Anthropocene temporalities, claims to property and
access, and the stark reality of spiritual and material exhaustion—and
investigate how they are expressed locally in and around the delta. Each
participant will be asked to participate in two seminars.

Members from the Field Stations, local scholars, and activists, as well as
international experts will develop and convene these seminars exploring
novel, collaborative, and exploratory epistemological practices and modes
of acting upon the urgencies of the Anthropocene.
*Applicants*

Applicants should be strongly committed to inter- and transdisciplinary
collaboration and demonstrate a broad interest in Anthropocene-related
research fields ranging from river studies, geography, geo- and climate
sciences, environmental studies, history, and anthropology, to design,
landscape architecture, and the arts. Active participation is expected,
including the months preceding and following the actual campus week.

This call addresses researchers from a wide range of backgrounds in the
sciences, humanities, engineering, design and the arts. From within
academia, the call addresses all levels ranging from final-year master’s
degree candidates, graduates, PhD students, postdoctoral candidates to
tenure and tenure-track faculty. Artists, actors, and activists from civil
society, the arts, and politics (e.g. think tanks, NGOs, etc.) are strongly
encouraged to apply as well.
*Procedure*

Applications can be submitted until* May 6, 2019.* using this online
application form
<http://application.anthropocene-curriculum.org/app/application/start>.
Applicants are asked to hand in a CV, a brief description of their interest
in the Anthropocene and the *Mississippi. An Anthropocene River* project in
particular, and share how they learned about the project. Acceptance
letters will be sent out by June 3, 2019.
*Registration & Funding*

The registration fee is 150 US dollars. Participants are expected to
procure their own funding. For those without access to institutional
funding, a limited number of need-based grants can be provided. Please
indicate and specify your necessity on the application form.
READ MORE ON HKW WEBSITE
<https://www.anthropocene-curriculum.org/pages/root/related-projects/mississippi-an-anthropocene-river/call-campus-nola/>

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