Wenn
Thursday 12 March
7.30pm – 10.30pm
It’s time to take a radical look at our ethical relations to nature and nonhuman beings.
In this special event to kick off the 2026 season, meet Sophia Club on the banks of the Birrarung at Abbotsford Convent to converse about human beings and our obligations to our kin in the natural world. Should we think of rivers as legal persons with rights? And what about animals? How can non-Indigenous law and ethics learn from Indigenous knowledge? And will this make a difference to our planet’s future?
Join Sophia Club for an evening of discussion and performance with social and environmental researcher Melissa Kennedy, water law and policy expert Erin O’Donnell, and vocalist and interdisciplinary artist Tina Stefanou.
Über
The Sophia Club is the latest venture from Aeon Media, the publisher of Aeon and Psyche magazines.
Everyone has a stake in philosophy; its vitality can be drawn out and re-energised through conversation, with each other, and the arts. The Sophia Club creates a space for people to come together, ponder big questions, encounter new perspectives, and appreciate the rich connections between thought, emotions and artistic expression. They call this space Live Philosophy.
Dr Erin O’Donnell (Speaker) is a water law and policy expert who is internationally recognised for her contributions to the ground-breaking new field of legal rights for rivers. An Associate Professor and ARC Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne Law School, Erin’s work explores the challenges and opportunities these new rights create for protecting the social, cultural and natural values of rivers. Since 2018, Erin has been a member of the Birrarung Council, and she has worked in partnership with Traditional Owners across Australia on a range of projects, including the Cultural Water for Cultural Economies project. Her current research fellowship explores the opportunity of treaty to address aqua nullius and create more sustainable settler state water laws.
Melissa Kennedy (Speaker), Tati Tati, belongs to Murray River Country in Australia, between the Murrumbidgee junction and the Barka junction. As a social and environmental researcher, Melissa aims to combat the settler-colonial control of water resources at the exclusion of First Nations’ inherent rights and responsibilities. She is currently undertaking her PhD at Monash University, and is a Senior Atlantic Fellow for Social Equity, a global community collaborating across borders and disciplines to address the root causes of inequity. Additionally, Melissa sits on the advisory board for the federal Aboriginal Water Entitlements Program, and is the Director and cofounder of Tati Tati Kaiejin, an Indigenous owned and operated conservation organisation.
Tina Stefanou (Artist) is a visual artist and performer living and working in Naarm/Melbourne. With a background as a vocalist, she works undisciplined, with and across a diverse range of mediums and practices. Informed by diasporic and working-class experiences, Stefanou engages in sound, filmography, installation and research as social practice, exploring with and beyond all-too-human and more-than-human vocalities. She has an ongoing relationship with a herd of elderly horses with whom she co-creates performative environments, outside of human-dominated contexts and audiences. Stefanou has performed and exhibited internationally at institutions like Le Pavé d’Orsay (Paris), E-flux (NYC), The Sydney Opera House, and the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (Melbourne).
This event is presented in partnership with Abbotsford Convent.