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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:The Geography and the Environment Colloquium Serieswith Banu Su
 bramaniam\,&nbsp\;Professor\, Women's and Gender Studies\, Wellesley Colle
 gePlant worlds are deeply entangled in human worlds. Drawing on recent int
 erdisciplinary scholarship in feminist\, postcolonial and indigenous studi
 es\, Banu Subramaniam reflects on how gender\, race\, class\, sexuality an
 d nation shape the foundational language\, terminology and theories of the
  modern plant sciences\, and how botanical theories remain grounded in the
  violence of their colonial pasts.&nbsp\;Subramaniam wrestles with these d
 ifficult origins and lays a roadmap to imagine new biological frameworks t
 hat harness the power of feminist thought to reimagine and reinvigorate ou
 r love of plants.&nbsp\;Subramaniam is the Luella LaMer Professor of Women
 ’s and Gender Studies at Wellesley College. Trained as a plant evolutionar
 y biologist\, Subramaniam&nbsp\;engages the feminist studies of science in
  the practices of experimental biology and is author of Botany of Empire (
 2024)\, Holy Science (2019) and Ghost Stories for Darwin (2016).Zoom link 
 to join this talk.
DTEND:20241025T203000Z
DTSTAMP:20260518T034552Z
DTSTART:20241025T190000Z
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SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:For the Love of Plants: Plant Worlds in the Shadows of Empire
UID:RFCALITEM639146583522045078
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<h3>The Geography and the Environment Colloqui
 um Series</h3><h4><span style="background-color: initial\; font-family: in
 herit\; font-size: inherit\; text-align: inherit\; text-transform: inherit
 \; word-spacing: normal\; caret-color: auto\; white-space: inherit">with B
 anu Subramaniam\,&nbsp\;</span>Professor\, Women's and Gender Studies\, We
 llesley College</h4><p>Plant worlds are deeply entangled in human worlds. 
 Drawing on recent interdisciplinary scholarship in feminist\, postcolonial
  and indigenous studies\, Banu Subramaniam reflects on how gender\, race\,
  class\, sexuality and nation shape the foundational language\, terminolog
 y and theories of the modern plant sciences\, and how botanical theories r
 emain grounded in the violence of their colonial pasts.&nbsp\;Subramaniam 
 wrestles with these difficult origins and lays a roadmap to imagine new bi
 ological frameworks that harness the power of feminist thought to reimagin
 e and reinvigorate our love of plants.&nbsp\;</p><p>Subramaniam is the Lue
 lla LaMer Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at Wellesley College. Tr
 ained as a plant evolutionary biologist\, Subramaniam&nbsp\;engages the fe
 minist studies of science in the practices of experimental biology and is 
 author of Botany of Empire (2024)\, Holy Science (2019) and Ghost Stories 
 for Darwin (2016).</p><p><a href="https://syracuseuniversity.zoom.us/j/967
 32244295?pwd=PYoSS9whQsMuNhPOZiyjesQFB7xbMG.1">Zoom link to join this talk
 .</a></p>
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