
Transformation without Apocalypse: How to Live Well on an Altered Planet | 2014
Location: Oregon State University
Let’s make no mistake: climate change is upon us. Environmental decline and social inequity are escalating. We must do everything possible to end dependence on fossil fuels. We must find ways to creatively disrupt business-as-usual destruction. That work will fare better if we can imagine all kinds of possible alternatives for a just and ecologically viable future. "Transformation without Apocalypse" engages this essential experiment, testing different sets of ideas about how to live on Earth.
Whether you are inspired by alternative visions of the future, or haunted by scenarios of climate chaos, or simply motivated to live with compassion and awareness, we hope this program will accompany you as you imagine and work toward a saner future. Spring Creek Project hosted the "Transformation without Apocalypse" symposium in Corvallis, Oregon, on Feb. 14-15, 2014. Keynote lectures, which are available below, included Tim DeChristopher, the courageous environmental activist featured in the film Bidder 70, renowned authors Ursula K. Le Guin and Kim Stanley Robinson and eco-philosopher Joanna Macy among others.
Nearly 1,000 people attended the keynote lectures and dynamic workshops in creative political activism, engaged writing, community building, eco-skills, climate grief and empowerment and more. The symposium also included a Radical Reimagining Fair featuring regional environmental justice organizations and a Film and Literature Festival featuring readings, films shorts, video clips and animate extravaganza.
Additional co-sponsors included the School of History, Philosophy, and Religion, the Hundere Endowment for Religion and Culture, the Anarres Project for Alternative Futures, the Environmental Humanities Initiative and the College of Liberal Arts at Oregon State University. All events were free and open to the public.




Transformation without Apocalypse Lectures
Rob Nixon
“Slow Violence, Environmental Activism, and the Arts”
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Susana Almanza
“Resisting Environmental Racism”
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Carolyn Finney
“Radical Presence: Race, Place, and Other Stories of Possibility"
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Rob Nixon, Susana Almanza, and Carolyn Finney
Panel discussion moderated by Joseph Orosco
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Amy Franceschini
“Excursions through Domains of Familiarity and Surprise”
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Tim DeChristopher
“A Movement with Soul”
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Sarah van Gelder
“Finding Our Places in Transformative Times”
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Kathleen Dean Moore
“On the Morning of the 8th Day”
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Tim DeChristopher, Sarah van Gelder, and Kathleen Dean Moore
Panel discussion moderated by Michael P. Nelson
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Joanna Macy
“Deep Time”
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Ursula K. Le Guin and Kim Stanley Robinson
A conversation and reading
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Learn More About the Speakers
Susana Almanza is the Co-Director of People Organized in Defense of Earth and her Resources (PODER), and is one of three co-chairs for the Southwest Network for Environmental and Economic Justice. She has served on numerous committees including the EPA's Title VI Implementation Advisory Committee and the City of Austin Environmental Board and she is a former Planning Commissioner for the City of Austin. She resides in East Austin, Texas.
Tim DeChristopher was arrested for sabotaging a 2008 auction of Utah public lands by registering and bidding without the intention to pay. His action became an inspiration to others concerned about the environmental crisis, as well as the story for the documentary Bidder 70. Together with other activists, he formed Peaceful Uprising, a volunteer-based climate action group committed to defending a livable future from the fossil fuel industry. Tim was released from prison in April 2013 and then attended Harvard Divinity School.
Carloyn Finney is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, where her work explores how difference, identity, representation and power play a significant role in determining how people negotiate their daily lives in relation to the environment. Finney serves on a number of national boards and committees including the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Orion Magazine and the Center for Whole Communities.
Amy Franceschini is concerned with notions of community, sustainable environment and the perceived conflict between humans and nature. Her work manifests itself on- and offline in the form of dynamic websites, installations, open-access laboratories and educational formats that challenge the cultural, social and economic systems we live in. Amy founded Futurefarmers in 1995 and Free Soil in 2004. She has received the Artadia Award, the Eureka Fellowship and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's SECA Art Award.
Ursula K. Le Guin was born in 1929 in Berkeley and lived in Portland, Oregon. As of 2013, she had published 21 novels, 11 volumes of short stories, four collections of essays, 12 books for children, six volumes of poetry and four of translation and had received many honors and awards including Hugo, Nebula, National Book Award and PEN-Malamud.
Joanna Macy is an eco-philosopher and scholar of Buddhism, general systems theory and deep ecology. Her work addresses psychological and spiritual issues of the nuclear age, the cultivation of ecological awareness and the fruitful resonance between Buddhist thought and contemporary science. As the root teacher of the Work That Reconnects, she has created a theoretical framework for personal and social change, as well as a powerful workshop methodology for its application.
Kathleen Dean Moore is a philosopher, nature writer, public speaker and defender of all that is wet and wild. She is also a Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and co-founder and Senior Fellow of the Spring Creek Project. Moore speaks widely to audiences of interested citizens, scientists, church groups and others about the need for a moral response to climate destabilization and species loss. Her newest book is Moral Ground: Ethical Action for a Planet in Peril.
Rob Nixon is the Rachel Carson Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he teaches environmental studies, postcolonial studies, creative nonfiction, African literature, world literature and twentieth century British literature. He is the author of Homelands, Harlem and Hollywood: South African Culture and the World Beyond; Dreambirds: the Natural History of a Fantasy; and Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor.
Kim Stanley Robinson is a winner of the Hugo, Nebula and Locus Awards. Themes in his writing often explore environmentalism, science and humanism. He is the author of the bestselling Mars Trilogy and many novels, including Fifty Degrees Below, Forty Signs of Rain, The Years of Rice and Salt, and Antarctica—for which he was sent to the Antarctic by the U.S. National Science Foundation as part of their Antarctic Artists and Writers' Program.
Sarah van Gelder is the co-founder and executive editor of YES! Magazine, for which common topics include the new economy, climate solutions, alternatives to prisons, food, water, peacemaking, health care and happiness. She also co-founded Suquamish Olalla Neighbors, which builds bridges between Native and non-Native residents of the Port Madison Reservation, and co-led a statewide effort to return the home of Chief Seattle to the Suquamish Tribe.
