Climate without nature : a critical anthropology of the anthropocene /Andrew M Bauer
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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SNU LIBRARY | 577.55 BAU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | 25569 |
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577.140721 GOP A laboratory manual for environmental chemistry | 577.140721 GOP A laboratory manual for environmental chemistry | 577.54 DAV The Arid Lands : history, power, knowledge | 577.55 BAU Climate without nature | 577.570 SAN Fundamentals of Ecology and Environmental Biology | 577.6 MAR Water ecosystem services | 577.64 ALL Stream ecology : |
Introduction : materializing climate --
Assembling the anthropocene divide --
On soils, stones, and social relationships of geophysical history --
On glaciers and grass and weather and welfare --
Social welfare without the anthropocene's nature --
Conclusion : toward a critical anthropology of global warming.
This book offers a critical reading of the Anthropocene that draws on archaeological, ecological, geological, and ethnographic evidence. Andrew M. Bauer and Mona Bhan argue that the Anthropocene narrative perpetuates the modernist binary between society and nature, thereby undermining a more inclusive and robust politics of climate change. Their analyses challenge the divisions between humans as biological and geophysical agents that underlie the ontological foundations of the period. Building on contemporary critiques of capitalism, the authors examine different conceptions of human-environment relationships derived from anthropology, notably conservation, environmentalism, and climate change, to engage with the current and pressing problem, global warming.
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