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==== Resilients in review: a diversity of practices ==== | ==== Resilients in review: a diversity of practices ==== | ||
- | * [[resilients:Words which Matter to People]] by [[:Dougald Hine]] | + | This page is an overview of the featured chronicles of the Resilients team. Resilients transform the concept of resilience into concrete practice as intentional voyages, experimental situations and real-life labs. Spanning several countries and numerous roads, paths, rivers, canals and gardens, the wide geographical spread of the Resilients' |
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- | | + | In [[Words which Matter to People]], Dougald Hine questions the concept of “resilience” itself -- not through academic debate, but by talking to people on the streets of Helsinki about the Finnish word //sisu.// Comparing their visceral and culturally grounded use of this concept with the distant, etiolated notion of “resilience” as it is deployed in political, environmental and scientific discourse, he finds that the meaning we make or find in the world -- embodied in such notions as //sisu// -- is deeply bound up with our capacity to endure in turbulent times. Read more about Dougald’s travels as journeyman and artist in transience in his wide-ranging |
- | * [[resilients:Danube Journey]] | + | |
- | * [[resilients: | + | Tim Boykett, Pippa Buchannan and a motley crew of enthusiastic DIY sailors embarked on an exploration of water rights and “luminous green” sailing in [[coc_overview|Control of the Commons]]. In [[Resilient Boating]], Tim writes of sustainability, |
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- | * [[resilients:A Leaky Loop]] by Bartaku | + | Natalia Borissova explored augmented urban gardening through a series of living lab experiments with “non-green” mushrooms, finding in fungi an infinite source of inspiration for recycling and adaptation to changing environmental conditions. Her practical explorations in mushroom growing are documented in [[non green revolution|The Non Green (R)evolution]], while [[go ask a mushroom|Go Ask a Mushroom: musings on Afterculture]] advocates fungi and their mycelial roots as a source of continued inspiration for a resilient “life after culture.” At the same time, Dismas Leonard Sekibaha narrates his experiences at Time’s Up as “gardener in residence” -- of both the green and non-green variety -- in [[My Summer in an Urban Garden]]. |
- | * [[resilients:bake your own|If you can’t pay for a loaf, go bake your own]] by Uroš Veber | + | |
- | | + | [[Edible Alchemy]] by Carole Collet and Bartaku |
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- | * [[resilients: | + | In [[the pollinators review|The Pollinators]], |
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+ | In connection with the Unmanned Resilience case study, Uroš Veber interviewed Helena Krapež, the owner of an excursion farm on the Gora plateau in western Slovenia. [[bake your own|If you can’t pay for a loaf, go bake your own]] is a fascinating ethnographic glimpse into the state of farming in this region, and by extension, the changes and upheavals taking place in the wider society of Slovenia -- not to mention the resourcefulness of one woman in challenging circumstances. | ||
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+ | Exploring methods of prototyping possible futures, Anna Maria Orru and David Relan discuss their scenario building toolkit in [[scenario symphony|Composing |