Deborah Coen (Yale HSHM), “Climate in Motion” (Yale Arts and Humanities Book Talk Series)

Event time: 
Wednesday, November 14, 2018 - 4:30pm to 6:00pm
Location: 
Sterling Memorial Library, International Room See map
120 High Street
New Haven, CT
Event description: 

Please join us for an Arts and Humanities Book Talk with Professor Deborah Coen, author of Climate in Motion: Science, Empire, and the Problem of Scale.

Today, predicting the impact of human activities on the earth’s climate hinges on tracking interactions among phenomena of radically different dimensions, from the molecular to the planetary. Coen shows how this multiscalar, multicausal framework emerged well before computers and satellites and extends the history of modern climate change back into the nineteenth century. 

Coen uncovers the roots of modern climate change in the politics of empire-building in central and eastern Europe. She argues that essential elements of the modern understanding of climate arose as a means of thinking across scales in a state—the multinational Habsburg Monarchy, a patchwork of medieval kingdoms and modern laws—where such thinking was a political imperative. Led by Julius Hann in Vienna, Habsburg scientists were the first to investigate precisely how local winds and storms might be related to the general circulation of the earth’s atmosphere as a whole. Linking Habsburg climatology to the political and artistic experiments of late imperial Austria, Coen grounds the seemingly esoteric science of the atmosphere in the everyday experiences of an earlier era of globalization. 

Climate in Motion presents the history of modern climate science as a history of “scaling”—that is, the embodied work of moving between different frameworks for measuring the world. In this way, it offers a critical historical perspective on the concepts of scale that structure thinking about the climate crisis today and the range of possibilities for responding to it.

This event is part of the 2018-19 Arts and Humanities Book Talk series.

Admission: 
Free
Open to: 
General Public