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El. knyga: Humanities for the Environment: Integrating knowledge, forging new constellations of practice [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by (Arizona State University, USA.), Edited by
  • Formatas: 262 pages, 28 Halftones, black and white; 28 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Environmental Humanities
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Nov-2016
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315642659
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 180,03 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 257,19 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 262 pages, 28 Halftones, black and white; 28 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Environmental Humanities
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Nov-2016
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315642659

Humanities for the Environment examines how evidence that human impacts on the Earth are causing the planet to transition into a possible new epoch challenges academic disciplinary assumptions not only in the humanities but also in scientific and international policy circles. The collection examines how the term "Anthropocene" is increasingly being used in media reports and other venues outside of academia. Special issues ofThe Economist, Nature, and The Smithsonian have explicated and popularized the term as a powerful explanatory concept for the ways that humans are altering the planet’s carbon and nitrogen cycles, playing a role in increasing rates of extinction, releasing huge amounts of toxins, atomic isotopes, and fossilized plastics into ecosystems everywhere, and changing the pH levels and temperatures of the world’s oceans, as well as engaging in activities causing polar ice to melt, sea levels to rise, and deserts to expand.

The collection will be the first book to reflect not only on the insights of the environmental humanities into the social, cultural, legal, political and environmental impacts of the Anthropocene, but also to make an intervention into the ways that the humanities are currently organized institutionally. It is the first book to focus on new "constellations of practice" emerging out of this networking and the first to explore how the humanities is currently re-organizing to more seamlessly work with social scientists and scientists at the international level on common projects.

This interdisciplinary work will be of great interest to scholars in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences interested in interdisciplinary questions of environment and culture

List of figures
vii
Acknowledgments ix
List of contributors
xi
1 Introduction: integrating knowledge, forging new constellations of practice in the environmental humanities
1(18)
Joni Adamson
PART I Integrating knowledge, extending the conversation
19(36)
2 Backbone: holding up our future
21(11)
Linda Hogan
3 Country and the gift
32(13)
Deborah Bird Rose
4 Introduction: backbone and country
45(10)
Michael Davis
PART II Backbone
55(108)
5 Twilight islands and environmental crises: re-writing a history of the Caribbean and Pacific regions through the islands existing in their shadows
57(13)
Karen N. Salt
6 Seaweed, soul-ar panels and other entanglements
70(18)
Giovanna Di Chiro
7 Is it colonial deja vu? Indigenous peoples and climate injustice
88(17)
Kyle Powys Whyte
8 Gathering the desert in an urban lab: designing the citizen humanities
105(14)
Joni Adamson
9 Environmental rephotography: visually mapping time, change and experience
119(26)
Mark Klett
Tyrone Martinsson
10 Integral ecology in the Pope's environmental encyclical, implications for environmental humanities
145(18)
Michael E. Zimmerman
PART III Country
163(96)
11 Radiation ecologies, resistance, and survivance on Pacific islands: Albert Wendt's Black Rainbow and Syaman Rapongan's Drifting Dreams and the Ocean
165(16)
Hsinya Huang
Syaman Rapongan
12 Walking together into knowledge: Aboriginal/European collaborative environmental encounters in Australia's north-east, 1847--1850
181(14)
Michael Davis
13 `The lifting of the sky': outside the Anthropocene
195(15)
Tony Birch
14 Literature, ethics and bushfire in the Anthropocene
210(15)
Kate Rigby
15 Placing the nation: curating Landmarks at the National Museum of Australia
225(17)
Kirsten Wehner
16 The oceanic turn: submarine futures of the Anthropocene
242(17)
Elizabeth Deloughrey
Index 259
Joni Adamson is Professor of Environmental Humanities in the Department of English, and Director of the Environmental Humanities Initiative at the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability at Arizona State University, USA.



Michael Davis is an Honorary Research Fellow with the Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney, Australia, and a Member of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies.