Environmental Humanities Seminar with Oliver Aas

A bookshelf, with the silhouette of a speaker reflected in the glass door.

Date and Time

April 9, 2026
03:00PM - 05:00PM EDT

Location

Plimpton Room (Barker Center 133)

Chronotopes of Melting

Speaker: Oliver Aas, 2025-26 MHC Postdoctoral Fellow

Respondent: Bruno Carvalho

Born and raised in Estonia, Oliver Aas is an interdisciplinary scholar working at the intersection of environmental humanities, visual studies, and comparative literature. His current book project, Arctic Forms: Literature, Art, Politics, examines the figure of the Arctic in the Anthropocene. His work addresses a central paradox: Although melting ice presents a radically new ecological problem, many of the representational strategies used to depict this phenomenon across different cultures and national registers—such as cartography, the sublime and the spectacular, and Cold War rhetoric—are inherited from earlier traditions. By engaging in a diachronic dialogue between “now” and “then,” Oliver asks how those older media change our contemporary understanding of climate change. He has also published on post-Soviet environmentalism, lowbrow music cultures, and the intersections between trauma, war, and digital art. He completed his PhD at Cornell University.

Bruno Carvalho is Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures and African and African American Studies, Co-Director of the Harvard Mellon Urban Initiative, and Affiliated Professor in Urban Planning and Design at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. He specializes in urban life and how cities change.

Registration is required for this event.

About the Series

The Mahindra Humanities Center presents an Environmental Humanities seminar series with our 2025-26 postdoctoral fellows.