top of page
Search
Andrea Cabrera Roa

PREFIGURING BUEN SOBREVIVIR: POST-EXTRACTIVIST, COMMUNITARIAN FEMINIST PRACTICES FOR GOOD SURVIVAL

November 12th at 4:00 pm

Fuller Room (Goddard Library 422)

Zoom link HERE

South American scholars and activists have proposed buen vivir and post-extractivism as utopian paradigms of alternative nature/society relationships rooted in indigenous knowledges. This talk reassesses and modifies these abstract concepts, proposing the idea of Buen sobrevivir, or “good survival”, as a radical, prefigurative politics grown out of communitarian feminist, post-extractivist praxis by Lenca women and their networks in Honduras.


Benjamin Fash is an artist and PhD Candidate at Clark University. His activist research with social movements is concerned with colonialist resource extraction and experiments with alternative economies, primarily in Honduras. He is co-director of the documentary Por la Vida, celebrating Lenca women's communitarian feminist practices. He is also co-founder of Cine Bolomchon, a community-based film production and exhibition collective.

47 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Announcing the Center

The Clark Center for the Study of Natural Resource Extraction and Society was launched in the summer of 2019. Clark faculty and student...

Comments


bottom of page