Liberatory Practices for Worlds in Crisis: A Conference

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Cambridge , United States

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In 2024, we are surrounded by crisis in nearly every sector of our world(s): environmental, political, social, cultural, and interpersonal. Crisis is not a new nor a unique phenomenon: Indigenous societies have faced decimation, war has torn through family and political associations, and environmental devastation cycles again and again. 

And yet, we have found new ways of living, resisting, and surviving. In Ideas to Postpone the End of the World (2019)Brazilian philosopher and Indigenous movement leader Aílton Krenak urges us to consider the past and present, writing that “When people speak of imagining a new possible world, it's in the sense of rearranging relations and spaces, introducing new understandings of what we recognize as nature as if we were not nature ourselves.” 

This conference will take place on March 22-23, 2025 at Massachusetts Institute of Tecnology (MIT) and invites graduate student scholars, activists, and practitioners to examine what it means and has meant to survive in a world in crisis. What do we mean by crisis? How do historical experiences of crisis inform our understanding of present crises? What is the meaning and purpose of “liberatory practices” in the historical and contemporary world? How do Indigenous, feminist, queer, trans, disability or other lenses offer alternative understandings of crisis? What world is possible after a crisis? By exploring these and more questions, we hope to consider how new methods of study and care practices in our scholarship might allow us to imagine different worlds, develop resilience in a crisis-laden world, become “undisciplined” academically, and/or form more caring and collaborative communities.