Event
Concrete | Dr. S.T. Lee Distinguished Lecture in the Humanities
3260 South Street Philadelphia, PA 19104
The Wolf Humanities Center presents the Dr. S.T. Lee Distinguished Lecture Series in the Humanities featuring Anna Tsing, Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Cruz.
Concrete is a material—and an adjective pointing to the physical existence of things. To be concrete is to have form in the material world. In this talk, renowned anthropologist Anna Tsing considers the material form of concrete as a building material, that is, the concreteness of concrete. Concrete repels water, and in the city of Sorong, Indonesia, where her current research has taken her, it calls forth floods, distributing mud. The concreteness of concrete is foundational to our current condition, stuck in the infrastructural lock-in of this dangerous time, the Anthropocene.
Featured Speaker
Anna Tsing teaches anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and at Aarhus University, Denmark. Her most recent book (with Jennifer Deger, Alder Keleman Saxena, and Feifei Zhou) is Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene: The New Nature (Stanford University Press, 2024). This same team curated the mammoth digital project Feral Atlas: The More-than-Human Anthropocene. Tsing is co-director of the Center for Southeast Asian Coastal Interactions (SEACoast) at UC Santa Cruz; she leads the center project, "Fragmented Porosity," which considers changing histories, livelihoods, and ecologies of the land-water interface.
The Wolf Humanities Center is Penn’s main hub for interdisciplinary humanities research and public programming. Established in 2017 by a gift from Noelle and Dick Wolf, the center grew out of the Penn Humanities Forum, founded by Wendy Steiner in 1999. Our goals are to demonstrate how vital the humanities are to the life of the mind and the health of society, and how fundamentally connected they are with many areas of urgent inquiry in medicine, law, business, and the sciences.