Twelve lessons in fungal activism, Indigenous
knowledge and collaboration for artists, gardeners, educators and anyone
intrigued by the fascinating life and inspiring metaphors of the
mycelium and the mushroom
The enormous popular interest in the world of fungi and the mycelium
testifies to its tremendous resonance as a metaphor for new ways of
thinking, new systems and behaviors. Taking its inspiration from this
world, Let’s Become Fungal! looks at a range of Indigenous
practices from Latin America, the Caribbean and Asia that are rooted in
multispecies collaboration, symbiosis, alliances, non-monetary resource
exchange, decentralization, bottom-up methods and mutual dependency—all
suggestive of the behavior of the mycelium.
Each of the book’s 12
chapters offers teachings on collaboration, decoloniality, nonlinearity,
toxicity, mobilization, biomimicry, death and being nonbinary, while
also examining the world of fungi. Let’s Become Fungal! shows how
fungi can inspire artists, collectives, organizations, educators,
policymakers, designers, scientists, anthropologists, curators,
urbanists, activists, gardeners, community leaders, farmers and others
to become more fungal in their ways of working and being
Yasmine Ostendorf-Rodríguez
(born 1984) works as a curator and researcher on art and ecology, and
is based in Mexico City. She has founded and directed many international
initiatives at the intersection of art and ecology, including the Green
Art Lab Alliance (Asia, Latin America and Europe) and the Nature
Research Department, the Van Eyck Food Lab, and the Future Materials
Bank at the Jan van Eyck Academie (NL).
Paperback
| 336 pages.