Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Subsurface Survivalism(s)
View graph of relations

Subsurface Survivalism(s): From Multiplanetary Futurity to (Post)Apocalyptic Contingency

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Published

Standard

Subsurface Survivalism(s): From Multiplanetary Futurity to (Post)Apocalyptic Contingency. / Jones, Craig.
2024. Paper presented at RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Jones, C 2024, 'Subsurface Survivalism(s): From Multiplanetary Futurity to (Post)Apocalyptic Contingency', Paper presented at RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, United Kingdom, 27/08/24 - 30/08/24.

APA

Jones, C. (2024). Subsurface Survivalism(s): From Multiplanetary Futurity to (Post)Apocalyptic Contingency. Paper presented at RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Jones C. Subsurface Survivalism(s): From Multiplanetary Futurity to (Post)Apocalyptic Contingency. 2024. Paper presented at RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, United Kingdom.

Author

Jones, Craig. / Subsurface Survivalism(s) : From Multiplanetary Futurity to (Post)Apocalyptic Contingency. Paper presented at RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{045d7e976a0040dab174820f8fe22d80,
title = "Subsurface Survivalism(s): From Multiplanetary Futurity to (Post)Apocalyptic Contingency",
abstract = "The ability to survive through emergent and speculative dangers – from climate breakdown and multiplanetary habitation to nuclear war and climate breakdown – are always posited as contingent upon the enclosure and commodification of the subsurface. Discourses of humanity{\textquoteright}s continued survival are perpetually framed as being subtended by the subsurface in one regard or another: whether this is by settling Mars through inhabiting lava tubes, mitigating climate change through sequestering CO2 into underground spaces, or even surviving asteroid bombardment via inhabiting bunkers that also store seeds, medicine, and water as humans wait to reclaim the surface.Indeed, the speculative markets developing around these areas have seen sustained and continuing growth as the survival of capitalism itself is presented as contingent upon the subsurface: these areas being touted as trillion-dollar markets. This framing of the subsurface as a saviour of capitalism is grounded within the history of capitalism itself, numerous financial {\textquoteleft}booms{\textquoteright} of the past stemming from locating deposits of various minerals, fossil fuels, and precious stones: whenever capitalism has been in crisis, efforts to locate subsurface wealth have intensified, a trend that continues through the examples above. Alongside these headlines within public and business circles, recent years have seen a growing interest in (re)conceptualisations of the subsurface and deep time as geography, sociology, and the GeoHumanities have begun to grapple with the challenges posed by and through the Anthropocene.With this context in mind, this paper will explore the variegated futures of the subsurface and how it is (re)created as a site by and through which the survival of species, the climate, and capitalism are permitted and the discourses that underpin there (re)imaginings.",
keywords = "Subsurface, Futures, Outer Space, (Post)Apocalypse, Survivalism",
author = "Craig Jones",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "30",
language = "English",
note = "RGS-IBG Annual International Conference ; Conference date: 27-08-2024 Through 30-08-2024",
url = "https://www.rgs.org/research/annual-international-conference",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Subsurface Survivalism(s)

T2 - RGS-IBG Annual International Conference

AU - Jones, Craig

PY - 2024/8/30

Y1 - 2024/8/30

N2 - The ability to survive through emergent and speculative dangers – from climate breakdown and multiplanetary habitation to nuclear war and climate breakdown – are always posited as contingent upon the enclosure and commodification of the subsurface. Discourses of humanity’s continued survival are perpetually framed as being subtended by the subsurface in one regard or another: whether this is by settling Mars through inhabiting lava tubes, mitigating climate change through sequestering CO2 into underground spaces, or even surviving asteroid bombardment via inhabiting bunkers that also store seeds, medicine, and water as humans wait to reclaim the surface.Indeed, the speculative markets developing around these areas have seen sustained and continuing growth as the survival of capitalism itself is presented as contingent upon the subsurface: these areas being touted as trillion-dollar markets. This framing of the subsurface as a saviour of capitalism is grounded within the history of capitalism itself, numerous financial ‘booms’ of the past stemming from locating deposits of various minerals, fossil fuels, and precious stones: whenever capitalism has been in crisis, efforts to locate subsurface wealth have intensified, a trend that continues through the examples above. Alongside these headlines within public and business circles, recent years have seen a growing interest in (re)conceptualisations of the subsurface and deep time as geography, sociology, and the GeoHumanities have begun to grapple with the challenges posed by and through the Anthropocene.With this context in mind, this paper will explore the variegated futures of the subsurface and how it is (re)created as a site by and through which the survival of species, the climate, and capitalism are permitted and the discourses that underpin there (re)imaginings.

AB - The ability to survive through emergent and speculative dangers – from climate breakdown and multiplanetary habitation to nuclear war and climate breakdown – are always posited as contingent upon the enclosure and commodification of the subsurface. Discourses of humanity’s continued survival are perpetually framed as being subtended by the subsurface in one regard or another: whether this is by settling Mars through inhabiting lava tubes, mitigating climate change through sequestering CO2 into underground spaces, or even surviving asteroid bombardment via inhabiting bunkers that also store seeds, medicine, and water as humans wait to reclaim the surface.Indeed, the speculative markets developing around these areas have seen sustained and continuing growth as the survival of capitalism itself is presented as contingent upon the subsurface: these areas being touted as trillion-dollar markets. This framing of the subsurface as a saviour of capitalism is grounded within the history of capitalism itself, numerous financial ‘booms’ of the past stemming from locating deposits of various minerals, fossil fuels, and precious stones: whenever capitalism has been in crisis, efforts to locate subsurface wealth have intensified, a trend that continues through the examples above. Alongside these headlines within public and business circles, recent years have seen a growing interest in (re)conceptualisations of the subsurface and deep time as geography, sociology, and the GeoHumanities have begun to grapple with the challenges posed by and through the Anthropocene.With this context in mind, this paper will explore the variegated futures of the subsurface and how it is (re)created as a site by and through which the survival of species, the climate, and capitalism are permitted and the discourses that underpin there (re)imaginings.

KW - Subsurface

KW - Futures

KW - Outer Space

KW - (Post)Apocalypse

KW - Survivalism

UR - https://event.ac2024.exordo.com/presentation/1361/subsurface-survivalisms-from-multiplanetary-futurity-to-postapocalyptic-contingency

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 27 August 2024 through 30 August 2024

ER -