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Episode overview
Hosts
Jason von Meding
Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
A.J. Faas — anthropologist and disaster scholar
J.C. Gaillard — geographer and disaster researcher
Key themes
Why disaster studies must continually read beyond itself
Theory as a way to unsettle settled ideas, not as abstraction for its own sake
Eclecticism, curiosity, and “thinking with” rather than “thinking about” communities
The limits of normative frameworks (e.g., vulnerability, “no natural disasters”)
How critical theory informs practice, not just scholarship
The importance of non-Anglophone, non-Western, and untranslated bodies of thought
Creating intellectual space for early-career researchers to take theoretical risks
Core discussion highlights
Introduction to Contemplating Catastrophe, a collection of short essays on thinkers who shape disaster thinking indirectly—philosophers, artists, theorists, and writers outside the field.
A.J. Faas discusses reading across philosophy, literature, anthropology, and history to keep thought “lively,” and reflects on how Gramsci and Santiago Castro-Gómez help disaster scholars rethink power, hegemony, and relationality.
J.C. Gaillard reflects on frustration with disaster practice as a driver for engaging critical theory, particularly Foucault, and argues that theory liberates practice rather than distracting from it.
Shared concern that dominant concepts can silence alternative ontologies and lived realities if left unexamined.
A collective call to broaden disaster scholarship beyond Euro-American traditions and to value thinkers writing in other languages and contexts.
Season 10 structure
Live episodes recorded through 2025, archived on our Youtube channel!
Thematic episodes planned on feminism, urbanism, anarchism, Black power, Latin American and Caribbean thought, East and Southeast Asian intellectual traditions, and Eastern philosophies.
By DisastersDecon4.8
1818 ratings
Episode overview
Hosts
Jason von Meding
Ksenia Chmutina
Guests
A.J. Faas — anthropologist and disaster scholar
J.C. Gaillard — geographer and disaster researcher
Key themes
Why disaster studies must continually read beyond itself
Theory as a way to unsettle settled ideas, not as abstraction for its own sake
Eclecticism, curiosity, and “thinking with” rather than “thinking about” communities
The limits of normative frameworks (e.g., vulnerability, “no natural disasters”)
How critical theory informs practice, not just scholarship
The importance of non-Anglophone, non-Western, and untranslated bodies of thought
Creating intellectual space for early-career researchers to take theoretical risks
Core discussion highlights
Introduction to Contemplating Catastrophe, a collection of short essays on thinkers who shape disaster thinking indirectly—philosophers, artists, theorists, and writers outside the field.
A.J. Faas discusses reading across philosophy, literature, anthropology, and history to keep thought “lively,” and reflects on how Gramsci and Santiago Castro-Gómez help disaster scholars rethink power, hegemony, and relationality.
J.C. Gaillard reflects on frustration with disaster practice as a driver for engaging critical theory, particularly Foucault, and argues that theory liberates practice rather than distracting from it.
Shared concern that dominant concepts can silence alternative ontologies and lived realities if left unexamined.
A collective call to broaden disaster scholarship beyond Euro-American traditions and to value thinkers writing in other languages and contexts.
Season 10 structure
Live episodes recorded through 2025, archived on our Youtube channel!
Thematic episodes planned on feminism, urbanism, anarchism, Black power, Latin American and Caribbean thought, East and Southeast Asian intellectual traditions, and Eastern philosophies.