WGXC-90.7 FM
Forest Euphoria: the Abounding Queerness of Nature with Dr. Patricia Kaishian
Rt. 23C and Maude Adams Rd. | Tannersville, NY 12485 | 518-589-3903
http://www.mtarboretum.org/
"A thrilling book about the abounding queerness of the natural world that challenges our expectations of what is normal, beautiful, and possible."
In Forest Euphoria, Kaishian shows us this making of a scientist and introduces readers to the queerness, literal and otherwise, of all the life around us. Fungi, we learn, commonly have more than two biological sexes—and some as many as twenty-three thousand. Some intersex slugs mutually fire calcium carbonate “love darts” at each other during courtship. Glass eels are sexually undetermined until their last year of life, which stumped scientists once dubbed “the eel question.” Nature, Kaishian shows us, is filled with the unusual, the overlooked, and the marginalized—and they have lessons for us all.
Growing up, Patricia Kaishian felt most at home in the swamps and culverts near her house in the Hudson Valley. A child who frequently felt out of place, too much of one thing or not enough of another, she found acceptance in these settings, among other amphibious beings. In snakes, snails, and, above all, fungi, she saw her own developing identities as a queer, neurodivergent person reflected back at her—and in them, too, she found a personal path to a life of science.
Dr. Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian is the Curator of Mycology at the New York State Museum, and a professor of biology with Bard Prison Initiative. Her research focuses on fungal taxonomy, diversity and evolution, as well as queer theory and philosophy of science. Forest Euphoria: the Abounding Queerness of Nature is her first book.
Copies of Forest Euphoria will be available for sale after the the lecture.

