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Green Marble
Green Marble 2025 — Internacional Meeting on Anthropocene Studies and Ecocriticism
Fracturing futures: surviving the age of polycrisis
Green Marble

The future is not written – it is fractured, uncertain, and full of possibility. We are entering an era of discontinuity, where old economic, political, and ecological systems are breaking down, creating both chaos and openings for radical change. What lies ahead will not be a single narrative but a mosaic of competing realities, demanding adaptability and entirely new ways of thinking.

This emergent “polycrisis” – a convergence of multiple, interrelated crises – defies linear solutions. Climate collapse, geopolitical instability, technological disruption, economic inequality, and social fragmentation constitute a web of mutually reinforcing shocks. Their cascading interactions overwhelm conventional responses and expose the inadequacy of incremental reform. In such a volatile landscape, survival demands more than resilience; it calls for systemic reinvention.

The scale and scope of disruption call for radical adaptive strategies: a wholesale reimagining of how we organize, govern, produce, and coexist. This includes transitions from extractive to regenerative economies, from centralized hierarchies to distributed networks, and from atomized individualism to collaborative interdependence. The imperative is to navigate collapse while actively cultivating viable alternatives – such as decentralized energy systems, post-capitalist economic models like cooperatives and circular economies, and participatory governance structures exemplified by citizens’ assemblies.

The question is not simply how to endure fragmentation, but how to transmute it into renewal. This requires adaptive frameworks that allow systems to evolve under pressure, radical pluralism that values diverse perspectives, and regenerative cultures that restore and nurture communities and ecosystems, rather than depleting them.

To move beyond mere survival and toward the construction of a livable future, we must pivot from reactive crisis management to proactive world-making. This entails envisioning a post-crisis reality – and undertaking the work of actualizing it in the present.

This meeting is framed as a gathering not of passive observers, but of those actively shaping alternatives. It aims to bridge theory and praxis by convening visionaries, practitioners, and changemakers across disciplines. “Fracturing Futures” is a call to embrace complexity, experiment fearlessly, and collaborate across boundaries. It rejects doom-and-gloom fatalism in favor of agency, creativity, and strategic reinvention. The goal is not merely to weather the storm but to redesign the ship while sailing it, turning disruption into opportunity and charting a course toward a more resilient world.

Themes of interest include (but are not limited to):

Post-capitalist transitions

Adaptive governance in crisis

Climate justice and regenerative ecologies

Technopolitics and digital sovereignty

Decentralized infrastructure and energy futures

Security, defense, and sovereignty in a fragmented world

Cultural resilience and re-indigenization

Networks of mutual aid and collective care

Narrative futures: literature, ecocriticism, and world-building

Polycrisis praxis: interventions from the margins

05
Sep
06
Sep
2025-09-05T21:20:00Z
2025-09-06T21:20:00Z
Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade do Porto
Rua do Campo Alegre s/n, 4169-007 Porto,

More info

Green Marble
Lecture
In English

The future is not written – it is fractured, uncertain, and full of possibility. We are entering an era of discontinuity, where old economic, political, and ecological systems are breaking down, creating both chaos and openings for radical change. What lies ahead will not be a single narrative but a mosaic of competing realities, demanding adaptability and entirely new ways of thinking.

This emergent “polycrisis” – a convergence of multiple, interrelated crises – defies linear solutions. Climate collapse, geopolitical instability, technological disruption, economic inequality, and social fragmentation constitute a web of mutually reinforcing shocks. Their cascading interactions overwhelm conventional responses and expose the inadequacy of incremental reform. In such a volatile landscape, survival demands more than resilience; it calls for systemic reinvention.

The scale and scope of disruption call for radical adaptive strategies: a wholesale reimagining of how we organize, govern, produce, and coexist. This includes transitions from extractive to regenerative economies, from centralized hierarchies to distributed networks, and from atomized individualism to collaborative interdependence. The imperative is to navigate collapse while actively cultivating viable alternatives – such as decentralized energy systems, post-capitalist economic models like cooperatives and circular economies, and participatory governance structures exemplified by citizens’ assemblies.

The question is not simply how to endure fragmentation, but how to transmute it into renewal. This requires adaptive frameworks that allow systems to evolve under pressure, radical pluralism that values diverse perspectives, and regenerative cultures that restore and nurture communities and ecosystems, rather than depleting them.

To move beyond mere survival and toward the construction of a livable future, we must pivot from reactive crisis management to proactive world-making. This entails envisioning a post-crisis reality – and undertaking the work of actualizing it in the present.

This meeting is framed as a gathering not of passive observers, but of those actively shaping alternatives. It aims to bridge theory and praxis by convening visionaries, practitioners, and changemakers across disciplines. “Fracturing Futures” is a call to embrace complexity, experiment fearlessly, and collaborate across boundaries. It rejects doom-and-gloom fatalism in favor of agency, creativity, and strategic reinvention. The goal is not merely to weather the storm but to redesign the ship while sailing it, turning disruption into opportunity and charting a course toward a more resilient world.

Themes of interest include (but are not limited to):

Post-capitalist transitions

Adaptive governance in crisis

Climate justice and regenerative ecologies

Technopolitics and digital sovereignty

Decentralized infrastructure and energy futures

Security, defense, and sovereignty in a fragmented world

Cultural resilience and re-indigenization

Networks of mutual aid and collective care

Narrative futures: literature, ecocriticism, and world-building

Polycrisis praxis: interventions from the margins

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