Deserting: Power and Resistance in Arid Lands investigates how desert landscapes, far from being empty or inert, become strategic sites of escape, subversion, and the reconfiguration of power. In these extreme territories, where state presence is often intermittent or violent, migrant communities, Indigenous peoples, and insurgent subjects reinvent ways of inhabiting, resisting, and evading. The desert does not only isolate—it also shelters, conceals, and enables the imagination of alternative forms of life beyond hegemonic control.
Program
10.24.2024
Arid Empire: A Conversation with Author Natalie Koch
Brittany Meché & Natalie Koch
12.03.2024
Green Neocolonialism in the Deserts of Northwestern Mexico
Iván Martinez & Caroline Tracey
01.30.2025
Disappearance and Forensics in Arid Borderlands
Robin Reineke, Filippo Furri & Natalia Mendoza
02.27.2025
Hollowing Deserts: A Critical Approach to Land Art
Aaron Katzeman & Miguel Fernández de Castro
04.10.2025
The Sahara as a Locus for Intergenerational Dissent
Hawad & Brahim El Guabli
06.05.2025
Memory of the Paths in the Andes
Gonzalo Pimentel & Natalia Mendoza