The Posthumanities Hub Reading Group meet-up 13/3
For our March reading group session, we’ll be reading some of Merlin Sheldrake’s Entangled Life: How fungi make our worlds, change our minds and shape our futures.
The Posthumanities Hub is a dynamo of activities and events. It is an engine of discovery. And we do it by regular webinars and events (open to all – we mean it, you ARE welcome to join any one of them). Webinars can take different shapes, as invited talks with designated commentators, mini-conferences, or panels. We welcome all kinds of research topics – all for the purpose of generating a multitude of perspectives, wide views, queer perspectives and deep, situated insight on the topic. Webinars are also the Hub’s mode of showcasing emerging scholars’ work and connecting people across fields while initiating discussion and new ideas.
Beside webinars, we also host other types of events, like workshops on location, artistic events, and sometimes international conferences.
In The Posthumanities Hub, we try our best to be an inclusive and accessible space for all, so please check out our Guidelines for Accessibility and Co-Learning with The Posthumanities Hub, and join us in this endeavour!
For our March reading group session, we’ll be reading some of Merlin Sheldrake’s Entangled Life: How fungi make our worlds, change our minds and shape our futures.
For our April reading group, we’ll read a few chapters from Ailton Krenak’s Ancestral Future. Everyone welcome!
Join us for a very special screening of Elina Bry’s film, Is the Earth Chronically Ill? (2025), followed by a Q&A with the artist. Elina’s […]
Hillevi Lenz Taguchi Welcome to the next Posthumanities Hub webinar with Hillevi Lenz Taguchi, in conversation with our very own Cecilia Åsberg. They’ll be discussing […]
Save the date for this upcoming webinar! With Myra Hird, Professor in the School of Environmental Studies at Queen’s University, Canada, and Erin Manning, artist, […]
Join us to read Ursula Le Guin’s The Word for World is Forest!
Welcome on Tuesday 9 June to a webinar with our very own Jennie Tiderman-Österberg. Jennie has recently defended her PhD in musicology at Örebro University, […]
How have histories of colonialism and their foundational language of gender, race, sexuality, and nation shaped the language, terminology, and theories of the modern plant […]