Veranstaltung

THE MANY MEANINGS OF FLORA

Re-Evaluating the Aesthetics and Politics of Plants

Interdisciplinary Conference: December 11–12, 2025
University of Applied Arts Vienna, Auditorium, Vordere Zollamtsstraße 7, 1030 Vienna

Plants are not rigid symbols; they are dynamic actors in cultural, political and economic processes. Depending on the historical context, the meanings they carry can be altered, recharged or transformed into resistant narratives. The interdisciplinary conference The Many Meanings of Flora critically re-examines the aesthetics and politics of plants, scrutinising their role in art, literature, science and society.

Throughout history, plants have shaped cultural narratives, functioning as projection surfaces for ideas of power, belonging, nature and civilisation, and becoming symbols of resistance, home, exile, knowledge, remembrance and oblivion. In art and literature, for example, they have been used as allegories of life and transience, while in colonial contexts they have become tools of exploitation and control. Botanical knowledge production was closely linked to imperial interests, contributing to the consolidation of Eurocentric systems of knowledge. Current debates demonstrate the growing importance of plants in political struggles, ecological movements and postcolonial discourse. However, these meanings are not fixed but are subject to constant re-evaluation depending on the political, social or economic climate. This conference focuses on the multifaceted meanings of plants, placing particular emphasis on viewing them as active elements in historical and contemporary negotiation processes.

Organized by Anita Hosseini (Department of Art History) and Isabel Kranz (Department of Cultural Studies)
moderated together with Lisa Marie Heuschober, Maria Inês Lopes Vales & Lorenzo Zerbini


Thursday, 11 December 2025

15:00 Anita Hosseini & Isabel Kranz: Welcome and Introduction

15:30 Botanical Memories
Clelia Coussonnet: There is no Silence in the Earth – Curatorial Approach to Botanical Politics
Bethan Hughes: An Elastic Continuum
Khadija von Zinnenburg Carroll: Longer Botanical Drifts

17:15 Coffee break

17:45 Discussion

18:30 Break

19:00 Keynote
Maria Thereza Alves: Seeds of Change. Memory of Earth, Plants, and Other Histories


Friday, 12 December 2025

10:00 Rethinking Botanical Epistemologies
Emilia Terracciano: Invasives in the Home/at Home: The Beautiful, the Bad, and the Ugly
Silke Felber: “Willi” and the Sensory Afterlives of Austrian Botanical Imperialism: The Case of Amorphophallus titanum

11:15 Discussion

12:00 Lunch break

13:30 Ecologies of Fascism
Nanna Heidenreich: Nature in and out of Place? Border Fascism and Plant Imaginations
Sonya Schönberger: Forest and War

14:45 Discussion

15:30 Coffee break

16:00 Queer Botanical Ecologies
Banu Subramaniam: Migrant Ecologies: Plant Worlds and the Queer Afterlives of Empire
Joela Jacobs: “Moves to Naturalization”: The Aesthetics and Politics of Queer Plants

17:15 Discussion

18:00 Coffee break

18:15 Concluding Remarks

The many Meanings of Flora Plakat
The programme can be downloaded here:

The many Meanings of Flora Programme

The abstracts of the lectures can be downloaded here:

The many Meanings of Flora Abstratcs

Date:

December 11–12, 2025

Venue:

University of Applied Arts Vienna, Auditorium, Vordere Zollamtsstraße 7, 1030 Vienna

Plakat
Link