توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب :
همراه Routledge برای علوم انسانی محیطی یک نقشه جامع، فراملی و بین رشتهای را برای این رشته ارائه میکند، و در عین حال بینشی از جهتهای جدید هیجانانگیز برای بورسیههای آینده ارائه میدهد. این جلد با بیان اهمیت دیدگاههای انسانگرایانه برای تعامل اجتماعی جمعی ما با بحرانهای زیستمحیطی، پتانسیل علوم انسانی زیستمحیطی را برای سازماندهی تحقیقات انسانگرایانه، گشودن اشکال جدید بینرشتهای، و شکلدهی بحثها و سیاستهای عمومی در مورد مسائل زیستمحیطی بررسی میکند.
بخش ها شامل:
انتروپوسن و اهلی شدن زمین
پسانسان گرایی و جوامع چند گونه
نابرابری و عدالت زیست محیطی
زوال و تاب آوری: روایت های محیطی، تاریخ و حافظه
هنرهای محیطی، رسانه ها و فناوری ها
وضعیت علوم انسانی زیست محیطی
این همراه اولین در نوع خود، موضوعات و مضامین اساسی را پوشش می دهد و لزوماً رشته های علوم انسانی و علوم اجتماعی و طبیعی را تلاقی می کند. با بررسی اینکه چگونه علوم انسانی زیست محیطی به سیاست ها و اقدامات مربوط به برخی از چالش های کلیدی فکری، اجتماعی و زیست محیطی زمان ما کمک می کند، این فصل ها راهنمای ایده آلی برای این زمینه به سرعت در حال توسعه ارائه می دهند.
فهرست مطالب :
The Routledge Companion to the Environmental Humanities- Front Cover
The Routledge Companion to the Environmental Humanities
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
List of illustrations
Figures
Tables
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: planet, species, justice—and the stories
we tell about them
The emergence of the environmental humanities
The environmental humanities between the Anthropocene and posthumanisms
Narrative, aesthetics, and media
References
PART I:
The Anthropocene and the domestication of Earth
Chapter 1: The Anthropocene: love it or leave it
Notes
References
Chapter 2: Domestication, domesticated landscapes, and tropical natures
Domestication politics and the human footprint
Domestication and the environmental humanities
The great Amazon wilderness debate: Meggers, “Neo-Meggersians,” and the “Denevan School”
Models of domestication
References
Chapter 3: “They carry life in their hair”: domestication and
the African diaspora
Suriname, 1711: they carry life in their hair
The Columbian Exchange: migration and crop transfers
Slave agency in crop introductions
African food crops in the transatlantic slave trade
Subsistence and slave food fields
African plants and the transatlantic commodity chain
Conclusion
References
Chapter 4: Domestication in a post-industrial world
The domesticated life and its history
De-domestication: European expansion and settler anxiety
Re-domestication?
References
Chapter 5: Meals in the age of toxic environments
Note
References
Chapter 6: Hybrid aversion: wolves, dogs, and the humans who love
to keep them apart
Thelma and Louise
Free-ranging wolfdog hybrids
Wolfdog hybrids as pets
Zweiweltenkind
Wildness at what cost?
Notes
References
Chapter 7: Techno-conservation in the Anthropocene: what does it mean
to save a species?
Climate change, species extinctions, and conservation strategies
The tragedy of the Anthropocene: from passenger pigeons to polar bears
What is the alternative?
References
Chapter 8: Coloring climates: imagining a geoengineered world
Geoengineering and the disciplines
Coloring the sky
Reflecting (on) the sky
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
References
Chapter 9: Utopia’s afterlife in the Anthropocene
Anthropocene and utopia
Utopia at the limit
Weak utopia
Notes
References
PART II:
Posthumanism and multispecies communities
Chapter 10: Renaissance selfhood and Shakespeare’s comedy
of the commons
Human selfhood in the Renaissance
Human selfhood in Shakespeare
References
Chapter 11: Multispecies epidemiology and the viral subject
The ethnography of zoonosis in Madagascar
References
Chapter 12: Encountering a more-than-human world: ethos and
the arts of witness
Albatrosses
Ethos
Mistletoe
Becoming-witness
Notes
References
Chapter 13: Loving the native: invasive species and the cultural politics
of flourishing
Category problems
Disturbance and equilibrium
Loving native species
On flourishing
Notes
References
Chapter 14: Artifacts and habitats
Artificial reefs
Bird nest boxes
Note
References
Chapter 15: Interspecies diplomacy in Anthropocenic waters: performing
an ocean-oriented ontology
References
Chapter 16: The Anthropocene at sea: temporality, paradox, compression
Notes
References
PART III: Inequality and environmental justice
Chapter 17: Turning over a new leaf: Fanonian humanism and
environmental justice
Notes
References
Chapter 18: Action-research and environmental justice: lessons
from Guatemala’s Chixoy Dam
Environmental justice
July 2003: encountering power, tasting terror
Forging an environmental justice movement
Environmental injustice: study findings
Action and reaction
The elusive experience of success
Accountability and justice
Environmental justice?
References
Chapter 19: Farming as speculative activity: the ecological basis of farmers’
suicides in India
Outline of the problem
Seeds of death?
Ecological roots
Markets and stratification
A speculative climate?
References
Chapter 20: Ecological security for whom? The politics of flood alleviation
and urban environmental justice in Jakarta, Indonesia
Jakarta
Hydrological engineering
Transforming threats into opportunities
Normalisasi
Doing no harm
Environmental (in)justice
Struggling for environmental justice and engineering with nature
References
Chapter 21: Our ancestors’ dystopia now: indigenous conservation and
the Anthropocene
Conservation in the Anthropocene
The dystopia of our ancestors
Anishinaabe restoration and conservation
Nmé, Manoomin, and Nibi
Note
References
Chapter 22: Collected things with names like Mother Corn: Native
North American speculative fiction and film
Collected things: Mother Corn
Inflection points: Gardens in the Dunes
Interrogating the ethics of biotechnologies: The Sixth World
References
Chapter 23: The stone guests: Buen Vivir and popular environmentalisms
in the Andes and Amazonia
Buen Vivir and other popular environmentalisms
Between a rock and a hard place
Buen Vivir and posthumanist political ontologies
Notes
References
PART IV:
Decline and resilience: environmental narratives, history, and memory
Chapter 24: Play it again, Sam: decline and finishing in environmental narratives
Note
References
Chapter 25: Hubris and humility in environmental thought
Hubris and humility, progress and decline
Revisions of hubris and humility
References
Chapter 26: Losing primeval forests: degradation narratives in South Asia
Sylvan tales: forests as locations of cultural value
Constructing narratives: origins, improvement, degradation, and development
The Gangetic plain: forests conquered?
The Western Ghats: remnant forests, remnant people
Discussion
References
Chapter 27: Multidirectional eco-memory in an era of extinction: colonial whaling and indigenous dispossession in Kim Scott’s That Deadman Dance
Literary remembrance: the environments of cultural memory
Remembering whaling in the settler colonial present
Figurations of memory: whaling as allegory
Creaturely life and multidirectional eco-memory
Conclusion
References
Chapter 28: The Caribbean’s agonizing seashores: tourism resorts, art,
and the future of the region’s coastlines
References
Chapetr 29: Bear down: resilience and multispecies ethology
Notes
References
PART V:
Environmental arts, media, and technologies
Chapter 30: Contemporary environmental art
The horizontal turn
The artist as adviser
Environmental abstraction
References
Chapter 31: Slow food, low tech: environmental narratives of agribusiness
and its alternatives
Slow food nonfiction: the ecological claims for local foodsheds
Heirloom seeds: the rhetoric of biodiversity versus biotech
Pleasurable politics: the cultural and aesthetic claims for slow food
The slow food test kitchen: Pollan’s Cooked
The alternative food futures of bioart
Notes
References
Chapter 32: Mattress story: on thing power, waste management rhetoric,
and Francisco de Pájaro’s trash art
References
Chapter 33: Touching the senses: environments and technologies at the movies
Environments at the movies: cinematic storyworlds and embodied simulation
Movies of the environment: technology, perception, and engagement in Chasing Ice
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Chapter 34: Climate, design, and the status of the human: obstacles and
opportunities for architectural scholarship in the
environmental humanities
Obstacles
Opportunities
References
Chapter 35: Climate visualizations: making data experiential
Models: between data and figuration
Scientific visualizations: between mastery and humility
Carbon consulting: making data matter
Notes
References
Chapter 36: Digital? Environmental: Humanities
Critical perspectives on technologically mediated experiences of nature
Environmental impacts of digital technologies
Digital technologies and activating publics
Digital scholarly tools, environmental content
Four branches of the same tree?
Conclusion for (Digital; Environmental; Humanities)
References
Chapter 37: From The Xenotext
PART VI:
The state of the environmental humanities
Chapter 38: The body and environmental history in the Anthropocene
Models of environmental history: systems and neo-Darwinism
Looking ahead
Toward an environmental history of culture
Notes
References
Chapter 39: Material ecocriticism and the petro-text
References
Chapter 40: Fossil freedoms: the politics of emancipation and the end of oil
Thinking past petroleum
Petromodernity as socio-metabolic regime
Thinking past liberation
References
Chapter 41: Scaling the planetary humanities: environmental globalization
and the Arctic
On the emerging Arctic humanities
The cryo-historical moment
At the center of this world
Environmental geopolitics: scaling and telecoupling
Note
References
Chapter 42: Some “F” words for the environmental humanities: feralities,
feminisms, futurities
Feralities
Feminisms
Futurities
References
Chapter 43: Biocities: urban ecology and the cultural imagination
Nature in the city: from garden cities to biocities
Nature and social justice: theories of biocities
Biocities and the imagination of the future
Note
References
Chapter 44: Environmental humanities: notes towards a summary
for policymakers
Ecologizing humanity
Humanizing ecology
Chiasmic conclusion
References
Chapter 45: The humanities after the Anthropocene
Genre trouble
Making the social
Notes
References
Index
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب به زبان اصلی :
The Routledge Companion to the Environmental Humanities provides a comprehensive, transnational, and interdisciplinary map to the field, offering a broad overview of its founding principles while providing insight into exciting new directions for future scholarship. Articulating the significance of humanistic perspectives for our collective social engagement with ecological crises, the volume explores the potential of the environmental humanities for organizing humanistic research, opening up new forms of interdisciplinarity, and shaping public debate and policies on environmental issues.
Sections cover:
The Anthropocene and the Domestication of Earth
Posthumanism and Multispecies Communities
Inequality and Environmental Justice
Decline and Resilience: Environmental Narratives, History, and Memory
Environmental Arts, Media, and Technologies
The State of the Environmental Humanities
The first of its kind, this companion covers essential issues and themes, necessarily crossing disciplines within the humanities and with the social and natural sciences. Exploring how the environmental humanities contribute to policy and action concerning some of the key intellectual, social, and environmental challenges of our times, the chapters offer an ideal guide to this rapidly developing field.