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El. knyga: Environmental Change and the World's Futures: Ecologies, ontologies and mythologies

Edited by (University of Sydney, Australia), Edited by (University of Technology Sydney, Australia)

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Climate change and ecological instability have the potential to disrupt human societies and their futures. Cultural, social and ethical life in all societies is directed towards a future that can never be observed, and never be directly acted upon, and yet is always interacting with us. Thinking and acting towards the future involves efforts of imagination that are linked to our sense of being in the world and the ecological pressures we experience. The three key ideas of this book – ecologies, ontologies and mythologies – help us understand the ways people in many different societies attempt to predict and shape their futures. Each chapter places a different emphasis on the linked domains of environmental change, embodied experience, myth and fantasy, politics, technology and intellectual reflection, in relation to imagined futures. The diverse geographic scope of the chapters includes rural Nepal, the islands of the Pacific Ocean, Sweden, coastal Scotland, North America, and remote, rural and urban Australia.

This book will appeal to researchers and students in anthropology, sociology, environmental studies, cultural studies, psychology and politics.

List of illustrations
x
List of contributors
xi
Ecologies, ontologies and mythologies of possible futures 1(14)
Linda H. Connor
Jonathan Paul Marshall
PART I Intellectual and speculative engagements with ecological change
15(48)
1 Towards an anthropology of the future: visions of a future world in the era of climate change
17(16)
Hans A. Baer
2 The first draft of the future: journalism in the `Age of the Anthropocene'
33(15)
Tom Morton
3 Ecological complexity and the ethics of disorder
48(15)
Jonathan Paul Marshall
PART II The politics of engagement
63(48)
4 Futures of governance: ecological challenges and policy myths in tuna fisheries
65(16)
Kate Barclay
5 The work of waste-making: biopolitical labour and the myth of the global city
81(15)
David Boarder Giles
6 From sociological imagination to `ecological imagination': Another Future Is Possible
96(15)
Ariel Salleh
James Goodman
S. A. Hamed Hosseini
PART III Environmental change in specific places and cultures
111(68)
7 Indigenous ontologies and developmentalism: analysis of the National Consultations for the Kiribati Adaptation Program
113(16)
Felicity Prance
8 When climate change is not the concern: realities and futures of environmental change in village Nepal
129(16)
Sascha Fuller
9 Ontologies and ecologies of hardship: past and future governance in the Central Australian arid zone
145(16)
Sarah Holcombe
10 From good meat to endangered species: indigenising nature in Australia's Western Desert and in Germany's Ruhr District
161(18)
Ute Eickelkamp
PART IV Body and psyche
179(52)
11 Climate change imaginings and depth psychology: reconciling present and future worlds
181(15)
Sally Gillespie
12 What wrecks reveal: structural violence in ecological systems
196(18)
Penny Mccall Howard
13 Emergent ontologies: natural scepticism, weather certitudes and moral futures
214(17)
Linda H. Connor
PART V Technological mythology
231(51)
14 Official optimism in the face of an uncertain future: Swedish reactions to climate change threats
233(14)
Mark Graham
15 Geoengineering, imagining and the problem cycle: a cultural complex in action
247(17)
Jonathan Paul Marshall
16 The creation to come: pre-empting the evolution of the bioeconomy
264(18)
Jeremy Walker
Index 282
Jonathan Paul Marshall is a senior research associate for the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia.



Linda H. Connor is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Sydney, Australia.