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Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene

The New Nature

Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Jennifer Deger, Alder Keleman Saxena & Feifei Zhou

Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene
Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene

Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene

The New Nature

Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Jennifer Deger, Alder Keleman Saxena & Feifei Zhou

Hardback / gebonden | Engels
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€ 34,50
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Omschrijving

"What is life really like on a fast-evolving Earth—for witchweed in Mozambique, water hyacinth in Java, the golden apple snail in Taiwan, and for us? This marvelous, multifaceted Field Guide digs deep beneath the global images of a new epoch and illuminates the changes taking place while showing us how to engage with them."—Jan Zalasiewicz, author of How to Read a Rock: Our Planet's Hidden Stories

"What is life really like on a fast-evolving Earth—for witchweed in Mozambique, water hyacinth in Java, the golden apple snail in Taiwan, and for us? This marvelous, multifaceted Field Guide digs deep beneath the global images of a new epoch and illuminates the changes taking place while showing us how to engage with them."—Jan Zalasiewicz, author of How to Read a Rock: Our Planet's Hidden Stories

"Wide-ranging and inclusive, conceptually fresh and creative, with openness and sensitivity to human-nonhuman relationships, this book offers a remarkable guide to the Anthropocene and the patchy unevenness that marks this new geological epoch. A book that is at once useful and thoughtful."—Dipesh Chakrabarty, author of One Planet, Many Worlds: The Climate Parallax

"Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene is poetic, playful, and unendingly curious. Its pages abound with unexpected stories and characters, inspiring readers to explore emergent patches for themselves. A timely call to rethink the scales and temporalities of ecological disruption, and a tool for building a new critical lexicon."—Kregg Hetherington, author of The Government of Beans: Regulating Life in the Age of Monocrops

"The connections traced in this beguilingly illustrated volume will make you think twice about the cascading consequences of seemingly small interventions, while giving ample play to indeterminacy about how the sojourns of viruses, boll weevils, Styrofoam, and comb jellies will work themselves out in the world. A powerful invitation to inspect the knock-on effects of human endeavors that are transforming ecologies in ways that evade anyone's control."—Kath Weston, author of Animate Planet: Making Visceral Sense of Living in a High-Tech Ecologically Damaged World

"Refusing the allure of a singular planetary vision, this book foregrounds the importance of creative, pluralistic, and above all, richly descriptive modes of understanding. An indispensable guide for grappling with our complex Anthropocene world."—Thom van Dooren, author of A World in a Shell: Snail Stories for a Time of Extinctions

"This Field Guide makes a mockery of the ideals that inspire imperialist and capitalist infrastructures. Through its multifarious renderings of the out-of-control consequences those infrastructures have unleashed, the book awakens readers to the urgent need for a new, sensible, patchy materialism. A sharp, gripping exploration of the tragic mess of the Anthropocene."—Isabelle Stengers, author of Another Science is Possible: A Manifesto for Slow Science

"[T]his illustrated work of environmental humanities spotlights Anthropocene hotspots, human-instigated environmental and biological catastrophes.... A usefully vivid approach to the complexities of worsening environmental problems."—Tony Miksanek, Booklist

"The book's litany of cataclysms is shot through with a surprising hopefulness, as the authors propose a philosophy of collective well-being extending across species. It's an unsettling but undefeated vision of a world in volatile flux."—Publishers Weekly

Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing is Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz and the author of The Mushroom at the End of the World. She is also a Professor at Aarhus University. Jennifer Deger is Professor of Digital Humanities and Co-Director of the Centre for Creative Futures at Charles Darwin University, Australia. Alder Keleman Saxena is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology and Program in Sustainable Communities at Northern Arizona University. Feifei Zhou is Adjunct Assistant Professor in Architecture at Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Together they are coeditors of Stanford's digital publication Feral Atlas: The More-than Human Anthropocene (2020).

Specificaties

  • Uitgever
    Stanford University Press
  • Verschenen
    mei 2024
  • Bladzijden
    344
  • Genre
    Sociale en culturele antropologie
  • Afmetingen
    229 x 152 mm
  • EAN
    9781503637320
  • Hardback / gebonden
    Hardback / gebonden
  • Taal
    Engels

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