{"id":1136,"date":"2019-04-30T11:01:50","date_gmt":"2019-04-30T11:01:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/regenesis.org.au\/?p=1136"},"modified":"2023-09-25T04:50:34","modified_gmt":"2023-09-25T04:50:34","slug":"love-among-the-ruins-with-ian-milliss","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/regenesis.org.au\/2019\/04\/30\/love-among-the-ruins-with-ian-milliss\/","title":{"rendered":"Love Among the Ruins with Ian Milliss"},"content":{"rendered":"

Barbara Lepani:<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

I recently met Ian Milliss who is one of the founders of the Kandos School of Cultural Adaptation (www.ksca.land). I was struck by a piece of writing Ian had on his wall, titled \u2018Love among the Ruins\u2019. For me this was the perfect response to the revisioning of our relationship to the natural world and one another as we begin to confront the reality of the impact of global warming and related species extinctions and environmental degradation on both human habitats and all the lifeforms that have been our companions during the years of the Holocene. This geological age has produced the planetary environment that supported the rise of ‘Human Civilisation\u2019 that began over 12,000 years ago after the last glacial age of the Pleistocene. Aboriginal habitation in Australia dates back at least 60,000 years well into the Pleistocene, holding in their cultural memory what it is to live in a world that is less environmentally benign for humans.Grief<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

As the Extinction Rebellion movement seeks to highlight, human society faces the very real prospect of extinction along with all the other species we have been driving into extinction through our industrial and agricultural practices to pursue our insatiable demand for consumer goods and consumable experiences, like mass tourism. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross mapped out the stages of grief that come with the death of a loved one. For us now grief is for Planet Earth and our consumerist lifestyles.\u00a0 First there is denial, then there is anger, then bargaining and depression, and finally acceptance.<\/p>\n

However these stages of grief are culturally informed by how we treat death in the first place. In the modern technologically advanced West, death is an enemy that can be defeated by technology, life can be prolonged, perhaps even forever through cyro technologies. The destruction of Earth as a habitat for humanity can be defeated by technology\u2014the escape to colonies on Mars and\/or geoengineering the climate and plant life.<\/p>\n

This modern cultural assumption of a \u2018tech fix\u2019 feeds on denial and anger\u2014the denial that climate change means we have to change our wants and habits of consumption, that the age of the rule of the \u2018White Man\u2019 is over, that \u2018America\u2019 cannot be \u2018Great Again\u2019. But as this denial becomes harder and harder to sustain, there is the rage that currently feeds into white male victimhood at loss of privilege, the rise of right wing populism for an authoritarian leader who can turn the clock back, the search for someone to blame\u2014the \u2018other\u2019\u2014be they Infidels, Muslims, Blacks, Secularists, Experts.<\/p>\n

And this bleeds into the epidemic of anxiety and depression, especially among our young.Love Among the Ruins<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

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Sunflowers & Song concert in the canefields, part of Sugar Vs Reef by KSCA members Lucas Ihlein and Kim Williams 2017<\/span><\/p>\n

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For the rest of us we are dealing with bargaining, depression and acceptance. We are looking for ways to respond to the challenge of climate change through transitions to renewable energy, to regenerative farming, to local food production and consumption, to recycling waste, to the coming together of community that welcomes the stranger, the refugee. We are searching to understand how the very way we make sense of our world has led us to this conundrum of an endgame. We are looking into other cultural pathways, like those of Australia\u2019s First Nations peoples with their enduring spiritual connection to \u2018country\u2019 that has seen them survive over 200 years of colonial dispossession, cultural and psychic destruction. Where the songlines that criss-cross Australia tell the story of ecological relationships on both a practical level of plant and animal life, and on the spiritual plane of the Creation Ancestors and their totemic expressions.<\/p>\n

We are seeking to find and celebrate love among the ruins as we look clear eyed into the future our society is bequeathing to our children and grandchildren. How does the project of art as cultural innovation feature in this? Artists are caught between producing works for the art market and art as cultural innovation that has sought engagement with the community around major contemporary issues.Ian Milliss:<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n

Love among the ruins may well be the most optimistic vision of the future that we could have, a love of all life and its amazing ecological weave, where there is no outside, no autonomy, everything is linked. It is inevitable that any human culture will generate constant cultural change as a type of adaptive evolutionary process. If we were to survive it would be by constantly adapting the cultural memes that make human society work and the people who do that are the people who should be described as artists. Sustainability isn\u2019t even an issue here because it is as natural as eating, breathing, sex. It will continue as long as humans continue.\u201dBarbara Lepani:<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

Today the most important contemporary issues facing Australian society cluster around:<\/p>\n