Culture and Science, the way forward?
Through Art, Media, Writing, the importance of communication and expression is undervalued in a global society that exudes knowledge and technological development, without necessarily harboring the net-effects of collaboration and transparency. This is particularly evident in the scientific community where life-changing breakthroughs are made daily across the globe, yet the exposure of which remains largely inhibited. Even whilst paying thousands of pounds to study at University, many journals and articles require payment to access. Myself and friends on multiple occasions would spend hours trying to find more than an abstract to a key article for our coursework and even honors projects.
Today’s media is saturated with celebrity culture and various relationship, entertainment, hair-dying, bill-paying, scandal-themed stories, which in an infinite list of worldwide and ‘doorstep’ events are toward the lower-priority end of the scale. Yet the ease of access to that world of information and the sheer volume of media types it is broadcast through has created societies with a modern-day culture-based education.
The power of this is both daunting and exciting. Used in such a way can lead to biased opinions, apathy and a belief that the environment is beyond help. Alternatively used in a way which celebrates intellectual, strength of character and other achievements can only promote the generation of ‘can-do’ attitudes and fuel positive action towards science and the environment. I watched the Pride of Britain Awards recently and was, expectantly, left feeling proud of not just Britons, but people in general, and it was a very welcome contrast to the majority of programme types on prime time television. Don’t get me wrong-light entertainment is a great attribute to the television schedule and magazine racks after a hard days work. But is it eclipsing the real news, and the desire for real news?
Already media platforms (example: television) are tuning in to a new, rejuvenated demand for scientific and environmental programmes. James Wong’s Grow Your Own series on the BBC and Countryfile are good examples of a new media objective. I hope in the near future this dissipates into other media forms and targets all demographics so everyone who lives on this planet can access information and share their opinions of their world. So many times in history the power of debate and communication has broken down discrimantory walls, defeated enemies, grown communities and created the foundation of a free society some of us live in today. The current time we are in calls for a response to some of the biggest challenges faced by people, but with the technology and knowledge waiting in the wings, our cultural domain can provide an arena of communication to fuse those together and help mitigate these challenges.
Documentaries to inspire 1) Home
Yann Arthus-Bertrand’s photographs are brought to life in this aerial-view representation of the planet, with interesting narration over the top to accompany the scenes.
Watch here
2) Zeitgeist
Controversial, and thought provoking.
Watch here
3)Zeitgeist addendum
Sequel to Zeitgeist, with similar themes and research into a whole new way of living. Interesting, and perhaps even more debate-sparking than its predecessor. Watch here
4) The 11th hour
Slick, informative, this documentary covers a range of topics, interviews a range of people and uses emotion, aesthetics, drama, facts to make you want to get out of your seat and do something. I watched this for the first time in full on a ferry from the Northern to the Southern NZ island a few months ago. Watching the film was impacting enough, but to step off the ferry into one of the most beautiful places on Earth brings home what’s at stake even more.
Watch the trailer here
Regret, emotion, humour-all you need to send in a message for those youtubing in 100 years time….
5) An Inconvenient Truth
Groundbreaking for its media coverage and strong political tie, thanks to Al Gore. One of the most interesting, impassioned lectures I’ve witnessed, edited with various environmental and ‘Al at home’ scenes.
Part 1 is here
Resources, Recession and Excess
Living within our means is a statement that can be applied to both financial and environmental situations. The temptation for instant gratification can be overwhelming at a time when quick-fixes seem like the only guarantee in an unstable economic climate. Whether its a business deal, negotiating on resource ownership, or someone with a debt unrivaled by income.
It’s at a point where most people have to take what they can get now, and deal with the consequences and inflation later. Student loans, mortgages, personal loans, all of those provide ways to access the things we need to live and survive, giving the illusion to a degree that nothing is limited. However the domino effect of debt and inflation around the world creates a shortfall with regards to the natural resources that we are ultimately taking the loans for in the first place. Loans are just one example, money in itself is used to represent value, but a value set by economic vitality and not by objective facts.
The problems of this uncapped way of living is exacerbated by the promise of population growth to 9 billion by 2050, negatively correlating with resource stocks and flows. The rate at which we use resources will continue to grow as the population does, unless dramatic changes in consumption across all industries and societies are implemented and adopted, by public and private sectors. From the management of the raw resources to the rippling effect on global finances, there are consequences throughout the production spectrum.
The good news is that there are ways of overcoming excess, by capitalizing on the recylability of products, using local goods and efficient planning, from long term financial considerations to planning for the next weeks meals. This has to extend beyond homeowners to those owning and managing mass resources, and unlike family knowledge that can be trans-generational, much of the resources are limited. Even those considered renewable, i.e. water, may pose a serious threat to national and international security, and ultimately it’s consumer behavior and corporate management, the former shifting the pressures of demand, which will hopefully lead to better management of resources.
Air travel-The Stigma
Last year I decided to sell my pride and joy, ‘Antionette’ – a boat I bought a few years ago from Russian yachtbuilder, Anton, and I used the money to go traveling. There was a lot of air travel, and weighing this up with the value of being part of different cultures, learning about them and their environment I appreciate the challenge in greening individuals’ footprints.
The year before I went on a field trip to Malaysia as part of my course, along with around 60 other students and half a dozen members of staff. There was some debate and resistance from people, some of whom friends, as to whether or not the trip should go ahead, on the basis that the carbon footprint would contradict the environmental research ethos.
Rightly it was pointed out that Environmental students and staff everywhere have a certain responsibility to promote greener living. In the grand scheme of things being green can be challenging as most people know, especially financially. If the imperfections of environmentally-friendly behavior mean a new class of graduates take away with them a unique opportunity to learn and experience a sensitive and hot-topic area of the world with regards to development then I think it’s justified.
Furthermore, realistically the actions of some passengers not taking comfort in the seats would not stop the plane going, or detract new customers.
Source: Emma Hames