Agenda

21 Sep 2026 10:00

Metabolic Commons: Against Entropic Zones and the Ecology That War Built Feminist Political Ecology

Aula Mario Baratto, Ca' Foscari University of Venice

The frameworks that organize contemporary environmental governance, climate policy, and energy transition emerged from Cold War military research, colonial field sites, and postwar techno-scientific infrastructures. The energy-flow paradigm that structures contemporary systems ecology, climate modeling, and green transition planning descends from a specific lineage, from Wilhelm Ostwald's energetics through Alfred Lotka's physical biology to Howard T. Odum's maximum power principle, in which life was reformulated as thermodynamic process, competition was encoded as ecological ground, and political accountability was excluded from the descriptive apparatus.

Against this inheritance, the workshop develops the concept of the metabolic commons: the historically produced, gendered, and racialized configurations of land, water, and collective practice through which communities reproduce the conditions of life. The entropic zone names its political-economic counterpart, a territory, community, or body whose social-ecological reserves have been irreversibly dissipated through extractive operations and registered as the structural underside of accumulation.

The workshop brings together ecological Marxism, feminist materialism, the history and philosophy of science, decolonial science studies, and political ecology toward a feminist political ecology adequate to the conjuncture of green transition, rearmament, and reorganized extractive frontiers. It asks what forms of metabolic commons are already being built from within entropic zones, what knowledge they generate, what political subject they constitute. We are particularly interested in contributions that engage specific material sites and geographies and in work that brings together theory with place-based, grassroots, and artistic modes of engagement.

Curated by Rose-Anne Gush (Graz University of Technology) and Antonia Majaca (Ca' Foscari University of Venice).

Workshop committee: Rose-Anne Gush, Antonia Majaca, Roberta Raffaetà.

Language

The event will be held in English

Organized by

NICHE Centre for Environmental Humanities, Ca' Foscari University of Venice, IZK Institute for Contemporary Art, Graz University of Technology, ERC project HealthXCross

Search in the agenda