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temporality

After the End

7: How Do We Tell the Time?

Sylvia Kokunda shares the Batwa perspective on time and the challenges her people have faced in adapting to a very different culture since they were removed from their ancestral forest homes in the 1990s.
After the End

6: Indigenous Time

Danya Carroll, indigenous scholar and public health practitioner, reflects on living with different world views, linear time and cyclical time and what we leave for future generations.
After the End

5: Time, Mortality, and the Immortal Jellyfish

In this episode of the podcast series After the End, Patricia Kingori, Miranda Lowe, Felix Flicker and Martin O'Brien come together for a discussion on time, mortality and immortality.
After the End
Captioned

4: Living in Zombie Time – Martin O’Brien

What is it like to live in Zombie Time? Performance artist Martin O’Brien opens the conversation on living beyond predicted life expectancy in what he calls ‘zombie time’.
After the End
Captioned

3: Does Time Exist – Felix Flicker

Does time exist? Theoretical physicist Felix Flicker from the University of Bristol explores whether time exists and living after the end of the universe.
After the End
Captioned

2: The Immortal Jellyfish – Miranda Lowe

The Jellyfish that refuse to die. MIRANDA LOWE CBE, a principal curator in the Department of Life Sciences at the NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM in LONDON, introduces us to the extraordinary world of the immortal jellyfish.
After the End
Captioned

1: Introduction – Patricia Kingori

Who decides when it’s over? In this episode of the podcast series After the End, Professor Patricia Kingori introduces the project and sets the stage for what’s to come.
Transformations: Economy, Society, and Place

Once a home: art, displacement and temporalities of haunting

This seminar discusses how city spaces are re-imagined through art activism in London.
Transformations: Economy, Society, and Place

Environmentalists’ temporalities: Urgency, transitions and the future

This talk explores how environmentalists conceive of time.
Anthropology

Do not resuscitate orders in a UK hospital: an ethnography of the future-present

Simon Cohn of Cambridge University looks at the ways health professionals and their activities construct an understanding of the human body according to particular temporal framings. An anthropology departmental seminar.

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