About this event
Professor Laura Ogden discusses her work with Indigenous and other peoples in southern Chile. This is a hybrid event. Join us in person in the Mayer Room or online via Zoom. No registration required in person; register for Zoom here.
In this talk, anthropologist Laura Ogden will discuss the ongoing legacy of Charles Darwin in the Fuegian Archipelago of southernmost Chile, with particular focus on the ways Darwin’s depictions of Indigenous people in the region continues to shape the present. Her talk is based on a decade of research in the region, including collaborations with ranchers, conservation organizations, and the Yagán Indigenous community.
Laura Ogden is Professor of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. She writes, "In the broadest sense, I am interested in understanding the politics of environmental change and conservation. My work contributes to theoretical discussions in political ecology, environmental anthropology, as well as post-humanist philosophy. I have conducted ethnographic research in the Florida Everglades, with urban communities in the United States, and currently, and Tierra del Fuego, Chile. My current book project, supported by a Guggenheim Fellowship, is called 'The Book of Birds: A Memoir of Extinction,' and explores our obligations to species threatened with extinction."