A Companion to Spanish Environmental Cultural Studies
Herausgeber: Pradanos, Luis I
A Companion to Spanish Environmental Cultural Studies
Herausgeber: Pradanos, Luis I
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Explores how writers, artists, and filmmakers expose the costs and contests of the Capitalocene era and guides readers through the rapidly developing field of Spanish environmental cultural studies.
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Explores how writers, artists, and filmmakers expose the costs and contests of the Capitalocene era and guides readers through the rapidly developing field of Spanish environmental cultural studies.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Tamesis Companions
- Verlag: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 346
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 162mm x 241mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 660g
- ISBN-13: 9781855663695
- ISBN-10: 1855663694
- Artikelnr.: 64299344
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Tamesis Companions
- Verlag: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 346
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 162mm x 241mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 660g
- ISBN-13: 9781855663695
- ISBN-10: 1855663694
- Artikelnr.: 64299344
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Edited by Luis I. Prádanos
List of Illustrations List of Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction:
Spanish Environmental Cultural Studies PART I: ENVIRONMENTAL CULTURAL
HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECOLOGY 1.Political Ecology in Spain 2. Modern
Iberian History at the Culture-Environment Interface: Cultures of Nature,
Modernization, and the Anthropocene PART II: WATER AND POWER 3. Roots Under
the Water: Dams, Displacement, and Memory in Franco's Spain (1950-1967) 4.
The Message in a Bottle: Waterworks in Modern and Contemporary Spain
5.Soil, Water, and Light: Aerial Photography and Agriculture in Spain PART
III: ECOLOGIES OF MEMORY AND EXTRACTIVISM 6.Developmentalism and the
Political Unconsciousness: The Spanish Forms of Necro-Extractivism, from
the Civil War to Neoliberal Democracy 7.S(h)ifting through the Wreckage
8.The Valley of the Fallen: From Francoist Environmentalism to
DemocraticEco-Memorials PART IV: ANIMAL STUDIES AND MULTISPECIES
ETHNOGRAPHIES 9.Multispecies Ethnographies in the World of Things
(Crematorio and En la orilla by Rafael Chirbes and Óliver Laxe's O que
arde): On the Need to Ecologize Humanities 10.What's in a Name? Animals and
Humanities Biogeography 11.Ready-to-Hand: The Withdrawal of Animal Life in
Francoist Cultural Production PART V: FOOD STUDIES AND EXPLOITATIVE
ECOLOGIES 12.Spain's Gastronomy: Capitalism and Reproductive Labor
13.Intensive Industrial Livestock Production: Envisioning the Burden on
Animals and the Environment PART VI: ECOFEMINISM 14.Early Ecofeminism in
Spain: El metal de los Muertos (1920) and Mineros (1932), (anti)Mining
Literary Interventions by Concha Espina, Carmen Conde, and María Cegarra
15. Spanish Ecofeminism PART VII: (NEO)COLONIAL AND RACIALIZED ECOLOGIES
16. Disaster, Coloniality, and the Franco Dictatorship 17. From Racial
Contaminant to Nutrient in Spain's Ecological Future PART VIII: TOURISM AND
THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMAGINATION 18. From Pleasant Difference to Ecological
Concern: Cultural Imaginaries of Tourism in Contemporary Spain 19.The Gaze
on the Tourist: Critical Approaches in Spanish Environmental Humanities
PART IX: ECO-MEDIATION AND REPRESENTATION 20.Ecopoetics 21.Spanish Film and
the Environment 22.Environmental Politics, Ecological Thought, and Spanish
Comics PART X: TRASH AND DISCARD STUDIES 23.Enlightened Waste: Burials,
Disease, and Public Health in Eighteenth-Century Spain 24.Aesthetics and
the Political Ecology of Spanish Waste Space 25.Discard Studies and Spanish
Narrative 26.Everything is Rubbish/Nothing is Rubbish: Basurama and the
"Trashformation" of Public Space Bibliography Index
Spanish Environmental Cultural Studies PART I: ENVIRONMENTAL CULTURAL
HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECOLOGY 1.Political Ecology in Spain 2. Modern
Iberian History at the Culture-Environment Interface: Cultures of Nature,
Modernization, and the Anthropocene PART II: WATER AND POWER 3. Roots Under
the Water: Dams, Displacement, and Memory in Franco's Spain (1950-1967) 4.
The Message in a Bottle: Waterworks in Modern and Contemporary Spain
5.Soil, Water, and Light: Aerial Photography and Agriculture in Spain PART
III: ECOLOGIES OF MEMORY AND EXTRACTIVISM 6.Developmentalism and the
Political Unconsciousness: The Spanish Forms of Necro-Extractivism, from
the Civil War to Neoliberal Democracy 7.S(h)ifting through the Wreckage
8.The Valley of the Fallen: From Francoist Environmentalism to
DemocraticEco-Memorials PART IV: ANIMAL STUDIES AND MULTISPECIES
ETHNOGRAPHIES 9.Multispecies Ethnographies in the World of Things
(Crematorio and En la orilla by Rafael Chirbes and Óliver Laxe's O que
arde): On the Need to Ecologize Humanities 10.What's in a Name? Animals and
Humanities Biogeography 11.Ready-to-Hand: The Withdrawal of Animal Life in
Francoist Cultural Production PART V: FOOD STUDIES AND EXPLOITATIVE
ECOLOGIES 12.Spain's Gastronomy: Capitalism and Reproductive Labor
13.Intensive Industrial Livestock Production: Envisioning the Burden on
Animals and the Environment PART VI: ECOFEMINISM 14.Early Ecofeminism in
Spain: El metal de los Muertos (1920) and Mineros (1932), (anti)Mining
Literary Interventions by Concha Espina, Carmen Conde, and María Cegarra
15. Spanish Ecofeminism PART VII: (NEO)COLONIAL AND RACIALIZED ECOLOGIES
16. Disaster, Coloniality, and the Franco Dictatorship 17. From Racial
Contaminant to Nutrient in Spain's Ecological Future PART VIII: TOURISM AND
THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMAGINATION 18. From Pleasant Difference to Ecological
Concern: Cultural Imaginaries of Tourism in Contemporary Spain 19.The Gaze
on the Tourist: Critical Approaches in Spanish Environmental Humanities
PART IX: ECO-MEDIATION AND REPRESENTATION 20.Ecopoetics 21.Spanish Film and
the Environment 22.Environmental Politics, Ecological Thought, and Spanish
Comics PART X: TRASH AND DISCARD STUDIES 23.Enlightened Waste: Burials,
Disease, and Public Health in Eighteenth-Century Spain 24.Aesthetics and
the Political Ecology of Spanish Waste Space 25.Discard Studies and Spanish
Narrative 26.Everything is Rubbish/Nothing is Rubbish: Basurama and the
"Trashformation" of Public Space Bibliography Index
List of Illustrations List of Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction:
Spanish Environmental Cultural Studies PART I: ENVIRONMENTAL CULTURAL
HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECOLOGY 1.Political Ecology in Spain 2. Modern
Iberian History at the Culture-Environment Interface: Cultures of Nature,
Modernization, and the Anthropocene PART II: WATER AND POWER 3. Roots Under
the Water: Dams, Displacement, and Memory in Franco's Spain (1950-1967) 4.
The Message in a Bottle: Waterworks in Modern and Contemporary Spain
5.Soil, Water, and Light: Aerial Photography and Agriculture in Spain PART
III: ECOLOGIES OF MEMORY AND EXTRACTIVISM 6.Developmentalism and the
Political Unconsciousness: The Spanish Forms of Necro-Extractivism, from
the Civil War to Neoliberal Democracy 7.S(h)ifting through the Wreckage
8.The Valley of the Fallen: From Francoist Environmentalism to
DemocraticEco-Memorials PART IV: ANIMAL STUDIES AND MULTISPECIES
ETHNOGRAPHIES 9.Multispecies Ethnographies in the World of Things
(Crematorio and En la orilla by Rafael Chirbes and Óliver Laxe's O que
arde): On the Need to Ecologize Humanities 10.What's in a Name? Animals and
Humanities Biogeography 11.Ready-to-Hand: The Withdrawal of Animal Life in
Francoist Cultural Production PART V: FOOD STUDIES AND EXPLOITATIVE
ECOLOGIES 12.Spain's Gastronomy: Capitalism and Reproductive Labor
13.Intensive Industrial Livestock Production: Envisioning the Burden on
Animals and the Environment PART VI: ECOFEMINISM 14.Early Ecofeminism in
Spain: El metal de los Muertos (1920) and Mineros (1932), (anti)Mining
Literary Interventions by Concha Espina, Carmen Conde, and María Cegarra
15. Spanish Ecofeminism PART VII: (NEO)COLONIAL AND RACIALIZED ECOLOGIES
16. Disaster, Coloniality, and the Franco Dictatorship 17. From Racial
Contaminant to Nutrient in Spain's Ecological Future PART VIII: TOURISM AND
THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMAGINATION 18. From Pleasant Difference to Ecological
Concern: Cultural Imaginaries of Tourism in Contemporary Spain 19.The Gaze
on the Tourist: Critical Approaches in Spanish Environmental Humanities
PART IX: ECO-MEDIATION AND REPRESENTATION 20.Ecopoetics 21.Spanish Film and
the Environment 22.Environmental Politics, Ecological Thought, and Spanish
Comics PART X: TRASH AND DISCARD STUDIES 23.Enlightened Waste: Burials,
Disease, and Public Health in Eighteenth-Century Spain 24.Aesthetics and
the Political Ecology of Spanish Waste Space 25.Discard Studies and Spanish
Narrative 26.Everything is Rubbish/Nothing is Rubbish: Basurama and the
"Trashformation" of Public Space Bibliography Index
Spanish Environmental Cultural Studies PART I: ENVIRONMENTAL CULTURAL
HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECOLOGY 1.Political Ecology in Spain 2. Modern
Iberian History at the Culture-Environment Interface: Cultures of Nature,
Modernization, and the Anthropocene PART II: WATER AND POWER 3. Roots Under
the Water: Dams, Displacement, and Memory in Franco's Spain (1950-1967) 4.
The Message in a Bottle: Waterworks in Modern and Contemporary Spain
5.Soil, Water, and Light: Aerial Photography and Agriculture in Spain PART
III: ECOLOGIES OF MEMORY AND EXTRACTIVISM 6.Developmentalism and the
Political Unconsciousness: The Spanish Forms of Necro-Extractivism, from
the Civil War to Neoliberal Democracy 7.S(h)ifting through the Wreckage
8.The Valley of the Fallen: From Francoist Environmentalism to
DemocraticEco-Memorials PART IV: ANIMAL STUDIES AND MULTISPECIES
ETHNOGRAPHIES 9.Multispecies Ethnographies in the World of Things
(Crematorio and En la orilla by Rafael Chirbes and Óliver Laxe's O que
arde): On the Need to Ecologize Humanities 10.What's in a Name? Animals and
Humanities Biogeography 11.Ready-to-Hand: The Withdrawal of Animal Life in
Francoist Cultural Production PART V: FOOD STUDIES AND EXPLOITATIVE
ECOLOGIES 12.Spain's Gastronomy: Capitalism and Reproductive Labor
13.Intensive Industrial Livestock Production: Envisioning the Burden on
Animals and the Environment PART VI: ECOFEMINISM 14.Early Ecofeminism in
Spain: El metal de los Muertos (1920) and Mineros (1932), (anti)Mining
Literary Interventions by Concha Espina, Carmen Conde, and María Cegarra
15. Spanish Ecofeminism PART VII: (NEO)COLONIAL AND RACIALIZED ECOLOGIES
16. Disaster, Coloniality, and the Franco Dictatorship 17. From Racial
Contaminant to Nutrient in Spain's Ecological Future PART VIII: TOURISM AND
THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMAGINATION 18. From Pleasant Difference to Ecological
Concern: Cultural Imaginaries of Tourism in Contemporary Spain 19.The Gaze
on the Tourist: Critical Approaches in Spanish Environmental Humanities
PART IX: ECO-MEDIATION AND REPRESENTATION 20.Ecopoetics 21.Spanish Film and
the Environment 22.Environmental Politics, Ecological Thought, and Spanish
Comics PART X: TRASH AND DISCARD STUDIES 23.Enlightened Waste: Burials,
Disease, and Public Health in Eighteenth-Century Spain 24.Aesthetics and
the Political Ecology of Spanish Waste Space 25.Discard Studies and Spanish
Narrative 26.Everything is Rubbish/Nothing is Rubbish: Basurama and the
"Trashformation" of Public Space Bibliography Index