
This is exactly an argument Kohei Saito makes in his book Degrowth - even if we know the odds are slim, do we not have a moral imperative to try while we still can?
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I’ll grow on you. Ideas over ideologies, allies over enemies.
This is exactly an argument Kohei Saito makes in his book Degrowth - even if we know the odds are slim, do we not have a moral imperative to try while we still can?
SUBSCRIBE! We need more textile perspectives for practical sustainability, especially re: aesthetics. I saw your arts and crafts comment and immediately related, this is exactly where American discourse in understanding and appreciation for Art falls apart (especially women in art). I think there’s a real opportunity to harness this inherent entanglement in art appreciation and redirect an arts and crafts style that shapes a Micheal’s discount tchotchke to be a sustainability focused work of art.
Very late to the party but I’m still working through Anatham by Neal Stephenson. I think it’s solarpunk adjacent enough, in that it’s hopeful and has a lot of the sustainability ideas in practice - but also showcases a side where things have gone very wrong. I highly recommend it! 🍄
I can finally call it “research!”
🤯 This is what most papers on these miss. These materials have the potential to have a huge impact on small scale, local community solutions, but only if it’s done like this! Incredible work.
Ok, now they’re just flirting with me