Specifications
book-author | Adam Bobbette, Amy Donovan |
---|---|
publisher | Palgrave Macmillan |
file-type | |
pages | 379 pages |
language | English |
asin | B07FKC8SQ5 |
isbn10 | 3319981889; 3319981897 |
isbn13 | 9783319981888/ 9783319981895 |
Book Description
Political Geology; (PDF) explores the rising area of political geology; an space of examine dedicated to understanding the cross-sections between politics and geology. It considers how geological forces resembling volcanoes; earthquakes; and unstable floor are political forces and how political forces have an affect on the earth. Together the authors intention to know how the geos has been recognized; spoken for; captured; managed and represented whereas making the lively underlying strata for producing worlds.
This thorough assortment features a selection of interdisciplinary matters together with the historical past of the geological sciences; the origin of the earth; non-Western theories of geology and the relationship between nature and people. It consists of chapters that re-suppose the earth’s ‘geostory’ along with case research on the politics of earthquakes in Mexico metropolis; ; geologists at Oxford; shamans on an Indonesian volcano; and eroding islands in Japan. In each case; political geology is attentive to the encounters between political initiatives and the generative geological supplies which can be enlisted and typically liquefy; slip or erode away. This ebook will probably be of nice curiosity to practitioners and students throughout the political and geographical sciences; in addition to to anthropologists; philosophers of science and sociologists extra broadly.
Reviews
“It has been widely supposed that social scientists should restrict their attention to the surface of the Earth; as a result; they have had little to say about the Earth’s geology. This wonderful collection finally ends this odd silence and; in bringing the study of politics to the Earth’s depths; opens up a whole new venue of geographical and historical enquiry.” — Andrew Barry; Department of Geography; University College London; UK
“Political Geology: Active Stratigraphies and the Making of Life is an inspiring and smart collection that includes some of the best writers on the topic. Don’t however be mistaken: it is not only about the solid ground beneath our feet; instead; the earth is moved as numbers; projects; calculations;; it haunts as colonial memories and as material dynamics. This ebook is one main collection that helps to outline the (geo)political stakes of the Anthropocene.” — Jussi Parikka; University of Southampton; creator of A Geology of Media
“Whether the newest era in the history of our planet should be termed the Anthropocene has yet to be determined; but the following disputes have left no doubt that we live in an era of political geology. Controversies about climate change; resource use; and distinctions between the biological; geological and human have brought a new appreciation of the political dimensions of the Earth sciences. Stretching from Korea and India to Poland and Mexico; this extensive volume is vital reading for anyone who wishes to understand the part of the geosciences in recent debates.” — James A. Secord; Department of History and Philosophy of Science; University of Cambridge; UK
NOTE: The product solely consists of the ebook Political Geology: Active Stratigraphies and the Making of Life in PDF. No access codes are included.
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