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Author:
Cauter, Lieven de, 1959- author.
Title:
Ending the Anthropocene : essays on activism in the age of collapse / Lieven De Cauter.
Publisher:
Nai010 Publishers,
Copyright Date:
2021
Description:
240 pages ; 23 cm
Subject:
Human ecology and the humanities.
Human ecology--Philosophy.
Human ecology and the humanities.
Human ecology--Philosophy.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents:
Overview -- Boarding the Anthropocene (Overture) -- Spleen of the Anthropocene. A small anatomy of political melancholy ; End of the Anthropocene -- Dis-closures of the commons. Common places: preliminary notes on the commons ; Utopia rediscovered ; Dis-closures of the commons (Proposal for a new concept) ; Political postscript to the rediscovery of the commons -- Identity and the heterotopia in the Anthropocene. Beyond identity (Polemic statement for a public debate) ; Other spaces for the Anthropocene: heterotopia as dis-closure of the (un)common ; Toothpaste and taboo (Letter to the newcomers of Cinemaximiliaan) -- Considerations on activism. Mary Poppins and the climate strikers ; Theses on art and activism in the age of globalization ; Blogs on urban activism in Brussels ; The Potato War and the slow science manifesto: on the GMO Event in Flanders ; Key features of activism today ; Extinction rebellion: civil disobedience for an ecological state of emergency -- Zoöpolitics and the age of pandemics. The Corona pandemonium (Blogs on the COVID-19 crisis) ; The rise of zoöpolitics (Introduction to a conference on urbanism and war) ; Postcorona city: city of capsules. Notes on urbanity in the age of pandemics -- Coda. A cyberpunk futurology of the present (Epilogue to my 'Millennium Trilogy') ; Acknowledgements ; Origin of the texts.
Summary:
In this book, activist philosopher and philosophical activist Lieven De Cauter investigates the idea that if we want to avoid collapse, we have to end the Anthropocene - the geological era of the gigantic, devastating impact of our species on planet Earth. It might even be, he argues, that the collapse of our current, growth-maximizing system is the only hope for the biosphere. Offering case studies on urban activism alongside more general reflections on civic action and social movements, De Cauter moves from the political melancholy caused by the near certainty of climate disaster and meditations on the end of "the Age of Man", towards reflections on more hopeful events of our times, like the resurgence of the commons. He hails the rediscovery of this forgotten and excluded third besides public and private, arguing it contains the seeds of another worldview and another politics. From this new perspective identity and heterotopia, other spaces as places for otherness, can be read in a new light. This collection of writings closes with texts on the corona crisis. Biopolitics, the care for the life of the population by the state, has gained a new topicality in this age of pandemics. The mix of philosophical, theoretical texts and newspaper articles make for a broadly accessible, exciting book of activist essays, in accordance with the basic creed of its author: "pessimism in theory, optimism in practice". Even if geologists are not quite sure when the Anthropocene has begun, it is high time to end it
Series:
Reflect ; #12
ISBN:
9462086117
9789462086111
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1205591560
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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