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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Slow Transparency: Lead, Water Crises, and the Formation of Publics
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SUMMARY:Slow Transparency: Lead, Water Crises, and the Formation of Publics
DESCRIPTION:<p>	The Mahindra Humanities Center invites you for an Environmental Humanities seminar with<strong> Kessie Alexandre, </strong>an Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her research organizes around questions of risk and ethics; environmental racism; climate justice and the social implications of climate change adaptation; Black geographies and diaspora; and the politics and ethics of infrastructure.<!--break--></p><p>	The Mahindra Humanities Center invites you for an Environmental Humanities seminar with<strong> Kessie Alexandre, </strong>an Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her research organizes around questions of risk and ethics; environmental racism; climate justice and the social implications of climate change adaptation; Black geographies and diaspora; and the politics and ethics of infrastructure. Her book project, <em>Floods and Fountains: Urban Water Governance and Black Spatial Futures</em>, is an ethnography of urban water insecurity told through mundane and spectacular forms of infrastructure breakdown and with a vast repertoire of Black environmental organizing struggles in Newark, NJ<em>. </em>This research has been supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the American Council for Learned Societies, the Wenner-Gren Foundation, and the Environmental Institute and Department of African American Studies at Princeton University. Kessie has published writing in <em>Geoforum </em>and <em>Current Anthropology. </em>She received her PhD in Anthropology with a graduate certificate in African American Studies from Princeton University in 2020.</p><p>	Steve Caton is the Khalid Bin Abdullah Bin Abdulrahman Al Saud Professor of Contemporary Arab Studies. His research and teaching interests include linguistics, cultural studies, gender, Yemeni poetics and politics, politics of water sustainability.</p><p>	<a data-url="https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/environmental-humanities-seminar-kessie-alexandre" href="https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/environmental-humanities-seminar-kessie-alexandre" title="">Registration</a> required. </p><p>	Contact: <a href="mailto:humcentr@fas.harvard.edu">humcentr@fas.harvard.edu</a></p>
LOCATION:Plimpton Room, Barker Center 133, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20230427T190000Z
DTEND:20230427T190000Z
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