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Geography Colloquium: Glaciers, Gender, and Science: Toward a Feminist Glaciology

February 27, 2015
8:30PM - 10:00PM
1080 Derby Hall

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2015-02-27 20:30:00 2015-02-27 22:00:00 Geography Colloquium: Glaciers, Gender, and Science: Toward a Feminist Glaciology Event Host: Department of Geography Mark Carey,Associate Professor of History and Associate Dean, Robert D. Clark Honors College, University of Oregon, presents "Glaciers, Gender, and Science: Toward a Feminist Glaciology." Everyone knows that glaciers have become icons of global climate change — that ice cores and glacier measurements have provided critical baseline data for understanding climate history going back 800,000 years, as well as yielding clearly-visible evidence of climate change in the present as glaciers shrink. But what does gender have to do with any of this? It turns out a lot, as his presentation will show. From the heroic men studying Antarctic ice to the manly mountaineers measuring glaciers, and the dedicated Coast Guard experts bombing icebergs in the North Atlantic, glaciological knowledge and human-glacier interactions have been influenced by gender, historically and right up to the present. Men and women are also affected differently by glacier retreat, whether their vulnerability to glacial lake outburst floods or through their representations of ice through art and literature. The “feminist glaciology” approach proposed in this talk offers new ways to think about ice, a fresh understanding of the history of glaciology and cryospheric sciences, and a framework for approaching social research on climate and global environmental change. The 2014-2015 Geography Colloquium Series is funded in part through the John Nelson endowment and the alumni, faculty, and friends of Ohio State Geography endowment. Visit the Department of Geography website for more information. 1080 Derby Hall College of Arts and Sciences asccomm@osu.edu America/New_York public
Event Host: Department of Geography


Mark Carey,Associate Professor of History and Associate Dean, Robert D. Clark Honors College, University of Oregon, presents "Glaciers, Gender, and Science: Toward a Feminist Glaciology."

Everyone knows that glaciers have become icons of global climate change — that ice cores and glacier measurements have provided critical baseline data for understanding climate history going back 800,000 years, as well as yielding clearly-visible evidence of climate change in the present as glaciers shrink. But what does gender have to do with any of this? It turns out a lot, as his presentation will show. From the heroic men studying Antarctic ice to the manly mountaineers measuring glaciers, and the dedicated Coast Guard experts bombing icebergs in the North Atlantic, glaciological knowledge and human-glacier interactions have been influenced by gender, historically and right up to the present. Men and women are also affected differently by glacier retreat, whether their vulnerability to glacial lake outburst floods or through their representations of ice through art and literature. The “feminist glaciology” approach proposed in this talk offers new ways to think about ice, a fresh understanding of the history of glaciology and cryospheric sciences, and a framework for approaching social research on climate and global environmental change.

The 2014-2015 Geography Colloquium Series is funded in part through the John Nelson endowment and the alumni, faculty, and friends of Ohio State Geography endowment.


Visit the Department of Geography website for more information.

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