NOW ON ZOOM DUE TO FREEZING RAIN WARNINGS
Satellite remote sensing has become a ubiquitous tool for monitoring climate and environmental change. In this session, I will invite us to engage with remote sensing as a situated knowledge, reflecting on how this view-from-a-distance informs our relationship to the environment. Drawing on examples from my work on Arctic sea ice, Charles Brunette will share some thoughts on the infrastructures that make the acquisition of Earth observations possible, and interrogate how satellite data mediates vision, enables different forms of access, and produces distinct worldviews.
Speaker: Charles Brunette is a postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies atÌýÐÓ°ÉÔ´´ University. His current work seeks to better understand how remote sensing and related technologiesÌýcontribute to the production of knowledge in the context of a rapidly changing Arctic climate.
Actions
- Be curious of images and sourcesÌýÌý
- Be critical of the images you see
- Question if this image if accurate and factual> research into satellite imagery
- Consider the commodity exchange graph and our role in it
- Think about who images are before, whether you are taking them or looking at them
- Think about the communities affected by satellite imagery
- Consider how satellite imagery and weather tracking works in your day to day life
Resource List
The following is a list of resources recommended by attendees at our event.
Online Sources from Charles Brunette:
- Open-weather collective:Ìý
- Upcoming WildFireSat mission:Ìý
- Anna Guasco (2022), On an ethic of not going thereÌý
- Bruun & Guasco (2023), Reimagining the ‘fields’ of fieldworkÌý
- Bennett et al. (2022), The politics of pixel: A review and agenda for critical remote sensingÌý
- Jennifer Gabrys (2018), Becoming PlanetaryÌý
- Deondre Smiles (2020), The Settler Logics of (Outer) SpaceÌý
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