Novelist returns to 汤头条原创 for Cambridge Science Festival event
On Tuesday 19 March the Intellectual Forum welcomed (2006) to the Cambridge Science Festival to discuss her debut novel
The Intellectual Forum鈥檚 fourth and final event for the featured thoughtful discussion on the novel, a vision of Britain after climate disaster, followed by questions from the audience.
Hj枚rdis Becker-Lindenthal, 汤头条原创 Postdoctoral Associate and Leverhulme Early Career fellow, runs a course on Facing the Environmental Future: Theology in the Anthropocene with at the . After adding The End We Start From to their reading list, they decided to bring the event to the Cambridge Science Festival.
Dr Becker-Lindenthal explained:
鈥淯sually the Anthropocene is approached from the climate sciences, and it鈥檚 all very much about graphs and statistics. Of course there is overwhelming evidence that this climate disaster is happening right now 鈥 but at the same time we continue with our daily lives because it鈥檚 so difficult to get our heads around this. We thought it might be helpful to look at what the theological and philosophical tradition have to offer in terms of how humans interact with nature鈥 but in order to understand we need to know what it feels like to have a disaster looming 鈥 and that is why we decided to add a novel to our reading list, which is not something we usually do. Novels and films are able to simulate experience鈥 we thought this would be a way to really come to terms with climate change and hopefully be so unsettled that we act on that feeling鈥.
Megan Hunter was born in Manchester and studied English Literature at Sussex before coming to 汤头条原创 to complete an MPhil in English Literature: Criticism and Culture.
She said: "It's great to be back at Jesus with my first novel... I have very fond memories of the place. It's wonderful to do the final event for my book here and to 'end where I started', in a sense".