Graduate Student Panel on The Art of Transformation
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Graduate Student Panel on The Art of Transformation

Transformative Studies Ph.D. students will explore themes from the elective course The Art of Transformation, sharing insights on care, justice, imagination, and change

Professor Jennifer Wells will present a graduate student panel exploring themes from the Transformative Studies elective course The Art of Transformation. She will offer a brief thematic overview, followed by several Ph.D. students who will share highlights of their thinking developed through the course.

Their reflections will engage with themes such as the arts, imagination, social imaginaries, care, entanglement, plant and animal intelligence, majority world scholarship, climate justice, mis-anthroposcenes, and real utopias.

The panel will conclude with time for Q&A and open discussion.

Join us to hear from current Ph.D. students as they share inspiration for our collective, creative futures!

Meet the Speaker

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Jennifer Wells headshot

Jennifer Wells researches human ecology and social change. Her research aims at bringing uplifting and imaginative responses to the growing poly-crisis. She draws from the theoretical areas of complex thought, real utopian studies, and degrowth, and from leading Indigenous, BIPOC and Global South scholarship. Wells has degrees from Yale, the University of California at Berkeley, and the Sorbonne, Paris IV. Since 2020, she has been a Visiting Scholar at the Sorbonne, Paris I, Center for Contemporary Philosophy and the Institute of Legal and Philosophical Sciences, in Paris, France. Currently, she is focused on a book project on discourse and praxis that shifts everyday thinking and worldviews towards a more complex and creative vision for the 21st Century. Her last book was the internationally recognized Complexity and Sustainability (Routledge 2014), on the contribution of complex thought to global sustainability. Her doctoral dissertation focused on complex thought and climate change (2009). She has done extensive public speaking, particularly in Paris and around the SF Bay Area and on the topics of applying systems and complex thought as well as imagination and creativity, to the climate crisis. Over her career, Wells has visited over 100 sites of ‘real utopias’ over four continents. She previously co-authored a book on the emerging biosciences, funded by and written for the Ford Foundation. After college, she worked for a few years as a writer at the United Nations Association and as Director of the Sustainability Education Center in New York, NY. She also helped to found and develop a writing and arts retreat center on an organic farm in Colebrook, Connecticut. Wells has a passion for new emergent sciences, humanities and arts, such as recent research in animal and plant intelligence and the environmental humanities.

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