Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition

Research output: Non-textual formExhibitionResearch

Standard

Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition. Brichet, Nathalia Sofie (Content producer); Hastrup, Frida (Content producer); Riede, Felix (Content producer). 2017.

Research output: Non-textual formExhibitionResearch

Harvard

Brichet, NS, Hastrup, F & Riede, F, Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition, 2017, Exhibition. <https://aesengagement.wordpress.com/2017/02/21/mild-apocalypse-feral-landscapes-in-denmark-reflections-on-an-exhibition/>

APA

Brichet, N. S. (Content producer), Hastrup, F. (Content producer), & Riede, F. (Content producer). (2017). Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition. Exhibition https://aesengagement.wordpress.com/2017/02/21/mild-apocalypse-feral-landscapes-in-denmark-reflections-on-an-exhibition/

Vancouver

Brichet NS (Content producer), Hastrup F (Content producer), Riede F (Content producer). Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition 2017.

Author

Brichet, Nathalia Sofie (Content producer) ; Hastrup, Frida (Content producer) ; Riede, Felix (Content producer). / Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition. [Exhibition].

Bibtex

@misc{358bb15be01a4f978d72a015a256a0a6,
title = "Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition",
abstract = "From the late 1930s until 1970, low-grade brown coal was extracted at S{\o}by in mainland Denmark. This activity carried out largely by manual labour massively transformed, if not destroyed, the surrounding landscape. The need for Danish brown coal extraction was spurred by increasing domestic demand, but even more so by the onset of World War II when supply lines from Britain were severed. Denmark needed a fossil energy source of its own, however poor the quality of the coal. The S{\o}by mine thus writes itself into a much wider narrative of global connections and changing patterns of production and consumption. Indeed, the very event – World War II – gave rise to what the scientific judges of the Anthropocene Working Group see as the most likely stratigraphic {\textquoteleft}Golden Spike{\textquoteright} marking the beginning of the Anthropocene: the atomic bomb explosions in the middle of the 20th century.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Feral Landscapes",
author = "Brichet, {Nathalia Sofie} and Frida Hastrup and Felix Riede",
year = "2017",
month = feb,
day = "20",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - ADVS

T1 - Mild Apocalypse – Feral Landscapes in Denmark: Reflections on an Exhibition

A2 - Brichet, Nathalia Sofie

A2 - Hastrup, Frida

A2 - Riede, Felix

PY - 2017/2/20

Y1 - 2017/2/20

N2 - From the late 1930s until 1970, low-grade brown coal was extracted at Søby in mainland Denmark. This activity carried out largely by manual labour massively transformed, if not destroyed, the surrounding landscape. The need for Danish brown coal extraction was spurred by increasing domestic demand, but even more so by the onset of World War II when supply lines from Britain were severed. Denmark needed a fossil energy source of its own, however poor the quality of the coal. The Søby mine thus writes itself into a much wider narrative of global connections and changing patterns of production and consumption. Indeed, the very event – World War II – gave rise to what the scientific judges of the Anthropocene Working Group see as the most likely stratigraphic ‘Golden Spike’ marking the beginning of the Anthropocene: the atomic bomb explosions in the middle of the 20th century.

AB - From the late 1930s until 1970, low-grade brown coal was extracted at Søby in mainland Denmark. This activity carried out largely by manual labour massively transformed, if not destroyed, the surrounding landscape. The need for Danish brown coal extraction was spurred by increasing domestic demand, but even more so by the onset of World War II when supply lines from Britain were severed. Denmark needed a fossil energy source of its own, however poor the quality of the coal. The Søby mine thus writes itself into a much wider narrative of global connections and changing patterns of production and consumption. Indeed, the very event – World War II – gave rise to what the scientific judges of the Anthropocene Working Group see as the most likely stratigraphic ‘Golden Spike’ marking the beginning of the Anthropocene: the atomic bomb explosions in the middle of the 20th century.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Feral Landscapes

M3 - Exhibition

ER -

ID: 362743904