Feminist Electrifying Art as Challenging People to (Re)think Their Relationship to Electricity
Feministické elektrizující umění jako výzva pro lidi, aby (pře)přemýšleli o svém vztahu k elektřině
diploma thesis (DEFENDED)

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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/185929Identifiers
Study Information System: 244669
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- Kvalifikační práce [6878]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Jiroutová Kynčlová, Tereza
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Humanities
Discipline
Gender Studies
Department
Programme Gender Studies
Date of defense
19. 9. 2023
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta humanitních studiíLanguage
English
Grade
Excellent
Keywords (Czech)
electricity, energy crisis, situated knowledge, settler colonialism, works of art, entanglements, affectKeywords (English)
electricity, energy crisis, situated knowledge, settler colonialism, works of art, entanglements, affectFeminist Electrifying Art as Challenging People to (Re)think Their Relationship to Electricity Abstract The need for decarbonization of energy production and the war in Ukraine has emphasized European's dependency over Russian oil and accelerated attention to the issues of the energy crisis in Europe. In Quebec, as electricity is powered mainly from hydropower, decarbonization has evaded proper considerations forgetting how this invasive energy production comes from and benefit settler colonialism. The pressing needs to address the energy crisis highlights its complexity and ongoing (mis)conceptions of electricity and its system within the general population. Electrical anthropologists have problematized western societies' understanding and conception of electricity as essential to (re)think our energy futures. Through an analysis of two case studies based on works of electrical art created by two women artists, this thesis analyzes how these works of art potentially challenge male dominant STEM practices by attending to the complexities and interconnectedness of electricity, its system, and the environment. The thesis argues that participants/listeners/viewers are challenged in their relationship to electricity (and its system) towards more responsible and response-able approaches. Drawing on feminist...