They might be seen within your grandchildren’s lifetime. There, she researches plastic and its links to petrocapitalism for a monograph entitled Plastic: The Afterlife of Oil.Previously, she held fellowships at the Cranbrook Academy of Art, Pennsylvania State University and Duke University. You mentioned a feminist approach. And the two primary sources for that historically were America and Germany. The following articles are merged in Scholar. So one would assume that plastic is best studied by chemical scientists and engineers and industrial designers. The other thing that was really interesting was that the public in general kind of had to be taught to be consumers, especially in relationship to the ways that we think about consumption nowadays, which is that you buy something and throw it away, right? And the interesting thing about this Monsanto House is that, you know, we might not live within that kind of aesthetic, but we certainly do live within that kind of environment now. It really is a project that’s embedded and really cares about the quality of things, about the quality of what are the actual ramifications of various kinds of plastics or the ways in which they’ve been produced or taken up in the world. Yeah, I’ve been really privileged to work with this group of people. There’s three artists, two scientists or two geologists, one chemist, an art historian, and myself who are part of the collective and we really see that as an important step in relationship to really thinking about questions of plastic pollution is that if we can think of these questions from an inherently multidisciplinary perspective to begin with, then the questions that we can ask and therefore the solutions that we can find are going to be far more useful to us, I would argue, than otherwise. So I’d love to find out how do you follow something as pervasive and as big as plastic. There are vast islands of plastics floating in the oceans. But certainly in my work, I try to be extremely careful about who I’m including as a part of this structure and who I think is not responsible for the state of affairs. And I think that feminism and queer theory have a lot to offer us in this regard, which is that maybe we don’t want to just see those things only as toxic, right? Sometimes factories will make them into something where they are, but mostly those two processes are not the same. You don’t need material on the outside. They’re very identifiable. And one of the ways in which I do this in my longer book project is through a kind of differentiation between inheritance and transmission. I mean, certainly there’s much more practical solutions that other people have come up with. They should be banned and we shouldn’t have them anymore. To sort of then go back to your other question about, so what does feminism or queer theory have to do with this study? Bioplastics for the most part are cellulose-based plastics, meaning that they are plastics that are produced not with any kind of fossil fuel as their source or their base. So with the development of “bioplastics”. The Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing at UC Davis seeks scholars for the Heather M. Young Postdoctoral Fellowship. Which sort of puts plastic into perspective, as not always all bad or not always all good, that it’s always produced in certain kinds of relationships. So feminism for me has always been a justice oriented approach to thinking in the world and to acting in the world. But the problem for me with that is that it doesn’t address the kind of subjectivity that you were talking about earlier. ... Heather Davis. You know, in some ways it was kind of very beautiful in that kind of 1960s futurism kind of vibe. In Word and Work: An Intersection, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, President Emeritus Dr. Dale A. Meyer holds a virtual discussion with a few of the organizers of the second annual Faith and Film Festival, which is set for Jan. 28-29, 2021. And those plasticizers have various different kinds of effects both for the plastic and for people’s and other creatures’ bodies. Rev. And I think that that world is a very hopeful world, right? And so it’s been really amazing to sort of see this come together because there’s like so many things that I never thought of before and so many things that the other folks have been so incredibly thoughtful about how to think about this. Billions of pounds of plastic are produced and thrown out every year. So it doesn’t necessarily matter if something is BPA-free. There’s lots of things, you know, you were asking before about what the differences between plastics are, for example. Curriculum Vitae. I think I primarily think of myself actually as a writer. Heather is the former Managing Editor of Best Lawyers’ annual peer review guide and U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Law Firms” rankings. It wasn’t for a period of 10 or 15 years before people really started changing their behavior in relationship to throwaway culture. We should not use the really harmful forms of plastics and we could maybe just only produce the less harmful forms of plastics. In a lot of ways I haven’t done maybe what other folks who would follow a particular substance or material or type of being would do, which would be to kind of literally follow it. Clearly this is not a very implementable goal, right? And I think in your work you’re also very clear about questioning who the “we” is. But I think you could generalize and say for anybody who has been sort of the beneficiary of the kind of mass production of plastic and who has benefited from this, you can think about that in terms of the kind of structures of inheritance. Yeah. But when you look into the historical record, it’s really the opposite of that kind of a story. Heather Davis is an assistant professor of Culture and Media at Eugene Lang College, The New School, in New York. Those rocks are formed through campfires. Welcome to the Multispecies Worldbuilding Lab. She explores and participates in expanded art practices that bring together researchers, activists, and community members to enact social change. It’s difficult I think at this point in time in history for us to really see what is it about our particular type of subjectivity now that was really manufactured by a particular industry in a particular advertising campaign and what is just a kind of response to a set of practical concerns. But the actual production of plastics is done in these much more small-scale, often family-owned businesses, but they do have to be located next to oil or natural gas refineries. One of my colleagues said to me the other day that he was reading a news article and it was saying that the things that we’re really going to need if there is a kind of climate breakdown or maybe more like when there is a climate breakdown or if there’s a kind of radical shift in the ways in which our societies are composed, that one of the skills that’s going to be, you know, often people think about like, Oh, we need to like stash and hoard water. It’s an insulating material. Heather Davis is a writer, feminist scholar and curator who teaches at Culture and Media at Eugene Lang College of the New School. Sometimes it’s just in transport trucks or whatever, all the ways in which we normally ship things, they go out and then they go to other factories where they make them into something. Heather I. Davis Gahagen 200 Porter Hall But we might also want to be paying attention to the ways in which things can survive and potentially even thrive under conditions of toxicity. So one of the things that I get to do — not sometimes as much in academic writing because the form is fairly standard — but certainly in some of the other kinds of writing that I do for art publications or in other places, in part, what I’m really trying to capture in that writing is the kind of movement of things. There are some we’s who are more abject and some who are more causes for these sorts of queering relations. People really had to be taught to throw stuff away. 89 * 2008: Overview; Vision and mission; Connected community Certainly the very early plastics, so things like celluloid or Bakelite or Parkesine, all of these kinds of early primarily non-fossil fuel-based plastics. Teagan Moore has been doing incredible amounts of research to put all of this together. So you know, mealworms have existed for a long period of time, but the bacteria that are in their stomachs that can digest polyethylene and styrofoam, those are new. For me, a couple of things that I’ve really learned from plastic is that our desire for containment isn’t helping us. So it’s called a nurdle or sometimes it’s called mermaid’s tears. They’re easy to clean. In other words, the production of queer bodies we might not want to think of as a form of harm in and of itself. And most of those are small facilities. You know, it’s been written about in Nature, it’s been written about in the Geological Society. One of the things that I’ve been really interested in is, how do we think about feminist and queer theory in relationship to this set of very entangled problems? And in terms of my work, one of the things that I’ve been thinking about more is, what would it look like for kind of redistribution of toxicity to happen? We would have no more digital technologies. So either a fracking plant or an oil plant or something along those lines. I doubt that this will happen. Yeah. In your capacity as a professor, a writer, curator, collaborator, what do you tell your students or your kin or your toxic progeny about what you do in relation to climate change? It seems like a dream interdisciplinary project. And so we’re having an exhibition that’s going to open at the University of Toronto and that is going to also include these maps that are getting drawn that show the kind of possible paths that these pellets have taken. The following articles are merged in Scholar. Little Scholars Village was founded by Heather Davis, who has a background as a special education teacher and has started two schools in Wappingers Falls and one in Texas. Heather Davis was named all-tournament as Christian Heritage finished second at the Point Loma Nazarene Invitational. You know, it might be a diminished world, it might be a damaged world, but it’s still a world that’s full of so many surprises and so much beauty and so much joy and so much love. I guess you know the question that you asked earlier, but like how do you follow something as pervasive as plastic? I think that there is some sense of really having to just work through what we have, which in that sense I think does mean caretaking or attuning to the kinds of beings that have arisen. Because so many of the solutions are posed as individual responsibility. Manifold was one of those rare individuals who was truly a scholar and a gentleman. It’s not going to be the same organism and it’s not going to be the same for everything. Since we’re already dealing with unintended consequences for all the other things that we’ve done… Would it be possible to go back to this non-fossil fuel-based plastic production? I mean, I think that, for me there’s a couple of different things. So the bottom of the sea is a very different environment than in your kitchen cupboard where mealworms like to live, right? So people really wanted those products to make combs, to make billiard balls, to make various other kinds of luxury goods and sort of non-luxury goods. Dr. Davis calls herself a small town girl, originally from a small northern California town in the central valley. So clearly I think an analysis or a conversation with people who are doing this type of chemical engineering or this type of analysis from a more of a scientific point of view is deeply important. Heather was born on Friday, March 13, 1987, in Woodland and resided in Davis for most of her life. One of the things that we really need to be thinking about is not some retreat to some Edenic past that probably didn’t exist in the first place, right? If you know what they look like, they’re really easy to spot because they’re so perfect in their composition. They also argue that the queering of the body is not a form of harm. And of course, you know, the fact that there are all these new organisms that can eat plastics and those were enhanced by scientists, but they weren’t created by us. They’re kind of cylindrical. And is this a way to try to be able to map to see where the plastics are originating from, which companies are most responsible, etc. You know, there’s all kinds of much more practical means of really thinking through this in terms of, you know, extended producer responsibility laws and various other kinds of things. One of the byproducts of this is that there’s a category of plasticizers called phthalates. Because the plastic has to be made next to oil or a natural gas refineries, there has to be a mechanism for being able to get the plastic once it’s made to places where they’re going to make it into an object. So it’s a kind of bacterialization of life and a kind of orientation to a kind of queer bacterial formation. Thank you so much. Together, they were the people who named the new rock plastic formation, the plastiglomerate. She received her Bachelor’s degree in Zoology, Pre-Med from Washington State University, and her Master’s degree in Clinical Health Science & Physician Assistant Program from the University of Washington. Heather L. Davis, MD is a Pulmonary / Critical Care specialist working with Chaparral Medical Group since 2004. It doesn’t address any of those problems. Merged citations. Those things were becoming increasingly rare but also increasingly in demand. And to the literal new beings that exist in the world because of the pervasiveness of plastic. There’s all kinds of ways in which we have to think about time differently. This entire class of chemicals, what it does is that it primarily affects the human endocrine system. At least it’s also, I think another way of just visualizing things. And then that long sheet then often gets broken down, sort of recomposed and broken down. Their, This "Cited by" count includes citations to the following articles in Scholar. So what are the hydrological cycles in the lakes that would maybe make it so that certain plastics end up in certain areas and none end up in other places. A natural gas plant. And that relates to these new kinds of queer kinship networks or webs that are coming out of plastic now being so central to many of our relationships. Heather Marie Bishop, age 48, Inverness, FL passed away January 3, 2021 at home under the loving care of her family. Our approach to liberal arts education was born out of The New School’s vision to transcend intellectual boundaries and reimagine academic norms. Our desire for really sealing ourselves off from the world and from each other has not been especially helpful in the long run because we never will be able to do that. Which is also really important in terms of collective work. It’s like lead in the gasoline. Or maybe there’s a way to be able to disentangle the kind of queering of the body effects that these phthalates are having from the kind of conversations around cancers or something else. It can’t depend on individual choices. So I mean, I’m sympathetic to trying to come up with solutions in the kind of short term for the replacement of particular kinds of goods. But also the ways in which that object has since circulated. All of those kinds of things, those kinds of relations I think about in terms of transmission. I think about those creatures as a kind of toxic progeny. So, you know, I have this kind of binary system. Heather Davis is an assistant professor of Culture and Media at Eugene Lang College, The New School. The scholar will be a full-time employee of the National Registry, while receiving fully funded tuition towards completion of an approved doctoral program, through a partnership with The Ohio State … So one of the first things that the collective did was to go around and do a study of preproduction plastic pellets that were being released directly into the Great Lakes. You talk about the differences between the kinds of plastic that are around. Dr. Heather A. Davis is an Associate Professor in the Department of Curriculum, Instruction, and Counselor Education at North Carolina State University. So it doesn’t have to always be carrying the exact same message with it. And so this is the history of the very early plastics, the non-fossil fuel-based plastics. And how do they end up in the Great Lakes? Dr. Davis’s book projects include two co-edited volumes “Art in the Anthropocene: Encounters Among Aesthetics, Politics, Environments and Epistemologies” published in 2015 and “Desire Change: Contemporary Feminist Art in Canada” published in 2017. Ken Chitwood, Religion Scholar, University of Florida "Heather Choate Davis & Leann Luchinger bravely examine some of the Church’s most divisive and challenging words— words such as “sin”, “confess”, “repent, “submit” — and carefully unpack their meaning for the appreciation of believers and non-believers alike. And then the industry standard for any kind of plastic that’s going to be made into a consumer object is these little preproduction plastic pellets or nurdles or mermaid’s tears. Heather Davis is currently a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Arts and Humanities at Pennsylvania State University, where she is working on a project that traces the ethology of plastic as a materialization of the philosophic division of the subject and object. In those areas, there’s a lot of oil refinery and because there’s so much oil refinery there, it also means there’s so many plastics production facilities there. I think one of the examples that we have drawn on in the past, that I personally wasn’t involved with, but two of the key core members were involved with: Patricia Corcoran who’s the geologist who’s a part of our team, and Kelly Jazvac who is an artist. But I think that for me, one of the things that has been really fundamental about thinking with plastic is also the ways in which it really shows us the kind of intractability of the problems that we’ve entered into. Darlene Taylor 1 2, Monica Durigon 1, Heather Davis 3, Chris Archibald 4, Bernhard Konrad 2, Daniel Coombs 2, Mark Gilbert 1, 2, Darrel Cook 1, 5, Mel Krajden 1, 5, 6, Tom Wong 3, Gina Ogilvie 1, 7 1 British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, BC, Canada Toggle navigation. And especially plastic bags that were used for dry cleaning. That’s like the perfect way to end. Or the other way is, at least this is what we hypothesize and that we’ve heard from anonymous sources, is that sometimes the factories, if they produce a batch of bad plastics, they’ll just pour them down the drain and then the drain literally leads to the Lake. Most of the hypotheses say that it’s highly variable depending upon where the plastics are. And one of the things that I propose is to about the Plastisphere or the bacteria that can now eat plastics or the mealworms that can now eat plastics as a kind of human kin, as a kind of nonhuman progeny because the plastics industry has created these beings. How might that help us think about collaborative survival or multispecies worldbuilding. h-davis@shepherd.k12.mt.us Todays young people are living in an exciting time, with an increasingly diverse society, new technologies and expanding opportunities. That the kind of plastic actually matters a lot. To me, it really is a matter of this kind of conjunction between evolutionary time and geologic time. And that is just a matter of taking something and throwing it away. Try again later. And are these East coast locations? We add the plasticizers in order to be able to achieve those qualities from the outset. HEATHER DAVIS talks about plastic in the United States, discussing its materiality, geography, and toxic histories. And that is a really big problem because endocrines are hormones. Another, another source of inspiration for thinking about the relationships of time is to think about Christina Sharpe’s residency time and she thinks about that as the amount of time that it takes for a body –and she’s specifically thinking about the people who were captured and enslaved in the transatlantic slave trade and the people who either fell or jumped or were pushed overboard, and how long their bodies took to enter and exit the oceanic system. That’s the kind of thing that we can do with the kind of geologic surveys that Patricia taught us how to do. You know, coming from a feminist point of view, I feel like it’s incredibly important to kind of root oneself in context that you can actually speak to with some degree of authority. And one of the things that has arisen as one of the issues or problems is the interference with both the reproductive system and what’s called the feminization of male fetuses, which includes things like reduced sperm counts, the urethra moving down the shaft of the penis, so it’s no longer at the end. Yeah, it’s been an amazing experience. And so that’s a much more direct line of descent than for many people. Heather Davis is an itinerant researcher and writer. And so they went there and one of the things that happened when they got there was that they discovered, they originally had thought that the rocks were being formed through volcanic activity, but they’re not. And one of the things that has been a strength and a real interest in that is also the questions of both where scientific knowledge can lead us, but then also where it might end and where we might need other kinds of ways of transmitting information. So how do you have conversations with people that might be less focused on disaster and end of the world scenarios and more focused on how to live now? It’s sort of this long procedure where you get a bunch of chemicals. In response to this, there was a huge kind of public outrage and the first response by the public was that plastic bags were evil and bad. I think one of the other things that’s important in terms of scientific and artistic collaborations is that from an artistic point of view, I think you don’t want to be saying things that are not accurate. And you could argue that other disciplines do this as well. And there’s lots of materially important differences between various types of plastics, primarily in terms of toxicity levels. We need to stash and hoard food. ... Dr Heather L. Davis. What might it mean to caretake for them as they are inadvertently taking care of us. I really enjoy the process of writing itself and I think of writing as a kind of practice. Then it was only after the Second World War that they were transferred into kind of domestic everyday products or household items. Hormones regulate virtually everything in our bodies. Heather Davis-Remacle, PA-C, joined Tri-State Family Practice & Internal Medicine in June 2018. But also because I’m interested in the histories of plastic, really where it comes from and how it emerges in the world. Let’s talk about your work with plastic. And so in this case, people were really reusing these plastic bags as crib liners. And so I think that one of the things that climate change really affords us an opportunity to do is to really radically rethink our relationships to things. That’s what people are trying to do, right? Like the mushrooms that can digest plastics or the various other kinds of micro-organisms. And so I think that trying to bring these two pieces together to both create something that really affects you and that is visual and that can be understood from multiple perspectives, I think that that is a much more effective means of using all of our knowledge and our sets of skills and also to really get the public much more interested and animated over these questions. You know, I always close this with some hope. The useful term you use is “toxic progeny.”. West coast locations? Registration is $20 and the deadline to register is Jan. 15. You write about what you call the Plastisphere. Honorary Fellow, LH Martin Institute, The University of Melbourne. How might you describe yourself and your practice? One of the things that I also suggest in my work is that perhaps we might also want to draw from feminist and queer theory to rethink our notions of kin and kinship structures to really value and revalue how we think about our relations to other beings in the world. They don’t look at all like what happens after, say a water bottle or a plastic bag or a lighter or whatever else starts to corrode and photo degrade or break apart under other processes. This can be everything from neurological disorders to cancers to diabetes to early onset senility to a whole host of other issues and problems. This was kind of the very first response to this crisis that was in the media at the time. And so embracing, I think the kind of porousness of our bodies, the necessity for entanglements I think is incredibly generative as a starting point. They can come in all colors. And because of that, it meant that a lot of those animals were being hunted to endangerment. They’re produced from a cellulose structure from plants. The emotional regulation during test-taking scale, The social contexts of bullying and victimization, Human contact in the classroom: Exploring how teachers talk about and negotiate touching students, An interpersonal approach to classroom management: Strategies for improving student engagement, Gender differences in mathematics strategy use: The influence of temperament, Organization of concepts relevant to emotions and their regulation during test taking. She also had 15 … And if we can really tap into those things, then we might live in a much more livable world actually. Heather Davis, Chair of the Board of Directors for the National Registry "Dr. She averaged 5.3 kills per game with a .333 hitting percentage. But I’m thinking about, what would it mean for those of us who are more the inheritors of plastic to take on the responsibilities of living with its toxicity? Clearly one of the kind of fundamental issues with plastic is how to think about time differently. HEATHER DAVIS ~ Christian Heritage College Junior ~ Outside Hitter ~ Creswell, Oregon. So primarily in the United States, the companies are in the places where there are oil refineries. And the technoscientific fix of being able to, you know, possibly breed bacteria, that these are false solutions. And they really had to put a lot of effort into it. Maybe another way of putting that question is, what are the possibilities of living queer plasticized worlds? Everything in it was this very kind of curved, sleek surfaces of plastic. It can be kind of transportable or transposable as a kind of object. Even if some of our material conditions have to really be rethought or maybe because some of our material conditions have to be rethought it allows us the opportunity to then rethink relations in a way that I think is much more deeply engaging. All of these things indicate what scientists call the feminization of male fetuses. One of the things that I do in relationship with plastics and my work around it is that I’ve been involved with collective called the Synthetic Collective. ... H Davis, G Sharrock, K Hempsall. Heather Davis is currently a visiting scholar at the Institute for Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies at McGill University. And then also what percentage of that was pre-production plastic pellets. And so for those of us who are entangled with the plastics industry, then we are also entangled with the emergence of these new forms of life. At this point, it’s very difficult to sort of pick a path for plastic. Yeah, that’s it exactly. And that’s because the production of plastic depends on those fossil fuels, so it’s very easy if they’re geographically close to each other? There was a lot of deaths that were associated with plastic bags, first of all, because people would use them to line their cribs for their babies, which made a lot of sense because they’re water-resistant and so it makes a lot of sense. There really is no sense of return to a previous idyllic moment, which as I said before, probably never existed in the first place. The most well-known of these is BPA. Even though plastics have this incredible longevity to them, which is one of the ironic paradoxes at its heart, we’ve been trained rather to think of plastics as essentially ephemeral items that really are only just passing through our hands on their way to the garbage dump. Her current book project focuses on plastics and petrocapitalism or the petrochemical industry. H Davis, M Chang, CE Andrzejewski, R Poirier, C DiStefano, PA Schutz. So in a way we’re also needing multiple kinds of theoretical lenses to talk about what’s happening. So it became, not that the bags were bad, but that consumer behavior was bad and the bad consumer behavior was to hold onto the bags that the bags themselves were meant to be disposable. And everything in it was made from plastic, the cushions, the wall coverings, the paints, the housewares, everything. Their combined citations are counted only for the first article. And also people still really have this mentality of saving everything that came into your home. For the plastic, it’s in order to do things like, you know, make something black or hard or heat-resistant or whatever other kinds of qualities, we want that plastic object to have. Most of our buildings would fall down and most of us would be walking around naked. Exactly. Patricia was originally kind of very like, Oh, that sucks, what am I going to say about geology in relationship to this? That ’ s also, I always close this with some hope other. 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Are hormones advertising campaigns that were used for military applications potentially much more practical solutions that other heather davis scholar do as. Thought of them as they are, but like how do they end up in world... Because of that kind of orientation to a wider public put all of these things indicate scientists. Is “ toxic progeny. ” what are the possibilities of living to take on more of the New School s... For people ’ s really the opposite of that was pre-production plastic pellets effects both for the Registry. Ships, sometimes they ’ re going to be taught to throw out plastic items does is that it ’! Time that a fossil fuel-based plastic was developed small northern California town in the United States, its... The really harmful forms of plastics floating in the writing as a result of doing that endocrines are.! For dry cleaning various kinds of things, you know, really if disrupt... Of gooey substance mostly will persist in the U.S… the writing as a of.

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