Pierre Du Plessis (Aarhus University), “Staying with the Truffle: Tracking Landscape Relations in the Kalahari Desert after ‘Man the Hunter’ ” (Yale Agrarian Studies)

Event time: 
Friday, November 15, 2019 - 11:00am to 1:00pm
Location: 
230 Prospect Street (PROS230), 101 See map
Event description: 

Plessis’s dissertation project, entitled Vegetal Gatherings: Plants, Fungi, and People through the Kalahari, explores the liveliness of Kalahari Desert landscapes through an attention to the Kalahari Desert Truffle and its plant symbionts, and contemporary practices of gathering these organisms. Focusing on these relationships, his research seeks to elaborate on the liveliness of landscapes as involving dynamic interactions between many entities. Plant and fungi movement, and the ways in which diverse forms of life come together are central to this study. Despite often being treated as immobile and static, plants and fungi move, even if perhaps at a slower pace than people or animals, forging tracks and trails in the landscapes they inhabit. Others converge on and follow these tracks, people among them. These tracks, confluences, and mergings ­– which he refers to as vegetal gatherings to signify the relations of plantlife and gathering practices –provide the entry point for this study of lively Kalahari landscapes and its forms of life.