In gathering roots, just plunging in will get you nothing but a hole. We have to unlearn hurrying. This is all about slowness. “First we give. Then we take.”
Robin Wall Kimmerer
The farmer’s carrots carry the soil to our kitchen. In patchy clumps the earth sticks to the root vegetables. Food aside, roots usually go unnoticed when we humans look at plants. Below the ground, plant roots extend in a similar or even vaster mass than the established stems and leaves above ground.
We dig (again) into Kimmerers writings, to reconnect with the teachings of plants and the wealth of knowledges. Let’s gather and take our time to notice them.
Between Us and Nature is an ongoing reading club that chooses texts related to natural sciences, art, anthropology, postcolonialism and the (post)anthropocene from a female perspective. Attendees read passages together out loud, and share experiences and thoughts about the nature they live in. Looking beyond disciplines, the group creates a space to learn from and with bacteria, algae, fungi, soil and multinaturalist narratives.
NOTE the TIME: We start at 18:30 CEST. We have 2 hours of reading together.
Come and join us with an open mind here: What: