This session is part of the **[[.:index|Webinar "Dialogue on Alternatives in the Time of Global Crises"]]**. # Dialogue 15: Capitalism, Its Crises and Its Alternatives: Understanding Real Utopias with **Lara Monticelli**, sociologist, and **Suryamayi Clarence-Smith**, Auroville-born and raised anthropologist as presenters > To confront the multiple crises characterising contemporary capitalism, we need a historical understanding of its functioning and its elements of instability. The debate on capitalism came back to the fore due to the financial crisis of 2007-2008. Today, more than ten years later, capitalism is still the dominant system and we often hear terms like Capitalocene, platform capitalism, surveillance capitalism, accelerations, post-capitalism. In the context of its resilience, how do we work for systemic and progressive change? One example is that of prefigurative social movements. Intentional communities like Auroville in southern India can show how change can happen through interstitial mechanisms of karst-like erosion of capitalism from within. * **Date:** Thursday 17th December * **Time:** 13:30 (UTC/GMT) * **Duration:** 120 minutes ## Recording Download: **[[https://archive.org/download/gta_webinar_20201217/gta_webinar_20201217.mp4|[ Video ]]]** (875Mb) | **[[https://archive.org/download/gta_webinar_20201217/gta_webinar_20201217.mp3|[ Audio ]]]** (95Mb) ## About the presenters ### Lara Monticelli {{ :pictures:webinars:gta-webinar-lara-monticelli.jpg?nolink&300|}}
Lara Monticelli is a political and economic sociologist, lecturer and public speaker interested in the critical study of capitalism, its crises and its alternatives. She works as Assistant Professor and Marie Curie fellow at Copenhagen Business School (Denmark). Since 2016, she is the co-chair of the international and interdisciplinary research network “Alternatives to Capitalism” at the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE). She is also the co-editor of a forthcoming book series titled “Alternatives to Capitalism in the 21st Century” with Bristol University Press. Her ongoing Marie Skłodowska-Curie project (2018-2021), titled ‘EcoLabSS – Ecovillages as Laboratories of Sustainability and Social Change’, focuses on the (re)emergence of community-based, prefigurative social movements (e.g., intentional communities, eco-villages, transition towns, solidarity networks) as living laboratories experimenting with practices of resilience and resistance to environmental, economic and societal challenges. Lara is especially interested in how these movements re-politicize and re-configure everyday life, thus representing radical attempts to embody the critique to contemporary capitalism and prefigure alternative, sustainable futures.
### Suryamayi Clarence-Smith {{ :pictures:webinars:gta-webinar-suryamayi-clarence-smith.jpg?nolink&300|}}
Suryamayi Clarence-Smith was born and raised in Auroville, the largest, most diverse, and amongst the oldest intentional communities in existence today. She has been exploring how Auroville’s ideals are engaged in practice in this experimental community, through autoethnographic research, since 2015. She completed a doctoral thesis in Development Studies at the University of Sussex in 2019, building on an award-winning undergraduate thesis on Auroville in Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Suryamayi’s research explores many aspects of Aurovilian society – notably socio-economy, collective organization, and education – and speaks to broader frameworks of utopian and prefigurative practice, social economy and alter-development, integral yoga and education, learning societies, community and intentional community. She has presented and published insights from this work to academic and non-academic audiences internationally, and continue to be struck by Auroville's richness as a site of experimentation in many fields, and the potential for insightful and impactful research to be produced here towards reimagining and reshaping human society.
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