We are happy to share the programme of the conference ‘The Waste Question: Landscapes of Toxicity and Resistance in Southern Italy’ taking place on the 10th of June. More details here.

 

The Waste Question: Landscapes of Toxicity and Resistance in Southern Italy

9:15-9:30        Welcome Remarks

9:30 – 10:45    Keynote

                        Chair: Robert Gordon (University of Cambridge)

                        Marco Armiero (University of Santiago de Compostela)

10:45-11          Coffee Break

11 – 12:30       Southern Landscapes and Imaginaries

Chair: Melissa Calaresu (University of Cambridge)

Damiano Benvegnù (University of St Andrews), “Organic Gramsci? Toward a Gramscian Ecopolitics”

Claudia Lombardo (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), “Wasted Landscapes, Energized Narratives: NATO Nuclear Militarization and Literary Resistance in 1980s Sicily”

Giulia Bellato (University of Cambridge), “Immunditiae and Community in Medieval Southern Italy: Conflict, Collaboration, Cohabitation”

12:30-1:30      Lunch

1:30-2:45        Keynote

Chair: Alice Parrinello (University of Toronto)

Monica Seger (William & Mary) [online], “Claiming Space with Counternarratives: To Tell a Story of Taranto”

2:45-3:15        Coffee Break

3:15-4:45        Waste and Toxicity

Chair: Luca Peretti (University of Cambridge)

Karl Schoonover (University of Warwick), “Dirtied Air: The Politics of Pollution in the Film Image”

Elena Emma Sottilotta (University of Cambridge), “Fairy Tales against Eco-Crime: Waste and Relationality in Contemporary Italian Cinema”

Alice Parrinello (University of Toronto), “‘Corpo celeste (2011) by Alice Rohrwacher, a Queer Provocation”

4:45-6:15        Taranto

Chair: Erica Bellia (University of Cambridge)

Raffaele Ippolito (UCL), “Beyond Sacrifice: Hopeful Pessimism and Co-Noticing in Taranto”

Selby Wynn Schwartz [online], “Three Margins of Taranto”

Michael Tortorella (Alma Mater Studiorum – Università di Bologna), “To Decolonize the Socio-Ecological Crisis in Taranto: Coloniality, Patriarchy and Right to Breathe”