26/04/2024
12:30 14:30
Séance 8… Lire la suite

Séance coordonnée par Thomas Tari
Clémence GADENNE-ROSFELDER (EHESS), "And Britanny became Pigland. A Social, Zootechnical, and Environmental History of Pig Farming in Britanny (1950s-1990s)"

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Organisé par : Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po
Évènement en français
29/04/2024
17:00 18:30
Elsa Devienne (Northumbria University) Online Seminar… Lire la suite

 

 

 

 

In the 1970s, health and safety accidents involving plastics and the counterculture’s emphasis on a return to natural materials made plastics uncool, dangerous even. A decade later, plastics were back in style and more convenient than ever. Yet some women in Texas and Oregon started noticing huge amounts of plastics littering shorelines. By organizing the first “citizen” beach-clean-ups, they brought the public’s attention back to the dangers of plastics. While often framed in the rhetoric of the “small gesture” that could “save the earth,” these events offered a radical proposition: holding producers accountable. Today, the beach-cleanup has become one of the most popular forms of environmental action, with Ocean Conservancy’s International Coastal Cleanup Day mobilizing over one million volunteers in 150 countries each year. But, for what and for whom are beach cleanups? By historicizing the beach cleanup, this talk will revisit the plastic crisis, modern environmentalist tactics, and nature consciousness in the neoliberal era.

Elsa Devienne is Assistant Professor of History at Northumbria University in the UK where she teaches environmental history, US history and American Studies. Her first book, Sand Rush: The Revival of the Beach in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles, is out this spring with Oxford University Press. In 2021, the French version of the book won the Willi Paul Adams Award given by the Organization of American Historians and was a finalist of the Prix de la Recherche SAES/AFEA.

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Organisé par : Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po
Évènement en english