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This book probes the interconnections of time and ecology in order to spark our imagination and inspire us to re-think the planetary, ecology, and otherwise. It presents debates that interrogate and elucidate the anxieties of the known and the unknown of this world and the planetary beyond, sifting through temporal accounts of the Anthropocene, human beings, and climate change.
The chapters in this edited volume spur conversations with different thought systems and their underlying assumptions about the composition of structures of time and contingent temporalities. The authors engage
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Produktbeschreibung
This book probes the interconnections of time and ecology in order to spark our imagination and inspire us to re-think the planetary, ecology, and otherwise. It presents debates that interrogate and elucidate the anxieties of the known and the unknown of this world and the planetary beyond, sifting through temporal accounts of the Anthropocene, human beings, and climate change.

The chapters in this edited volume spur conversations with different thought systems and their underlying assumptions about the composition of structures of time and contingent temporalities. The authors engage rising temperatures in the oceans and air, the consequences, intended and unintended, of investments in various forms of "development", and the potential catastrophe unfolding in real time. Recent temporal strategies such as mitigation and adaptation to the "climate crisis" are challenged as they further compound and commodify the inquiry, the understanding and responses to environmental degradations, extractions, and displacements. Anti-colonial and decolonial debates about the structures of time, the planetary, and ecology are crucial contributions of this volume. Further, privileging the vantage points of the colonized and enslaved, the authors of this volume challenge dominant universal, cyclical, and retrospective structures of time and the planetary. Through research, poetry, art, and popular cultural analyses, the authors attend to the ways that the struggles of the "submerged," indigenous and black communities for climate justice become coded as a global warming crisis.

This volume grapples with how racial climate struggles and unrest become mobilized both as a source of paralysis and as an opportunity for further expropriation and expansion of data accumulation markets for settler planetary projects all in the name of global warming. Ultimately, the authors in this volume argue that conventional attempts at exploiting the planetary all depend uponideas of conquest and the mastery and control of ecologies, global governance, and individual behaviors. In this sense, fears about the unknown future of our planet miss what is at stake in the structures of time, the question of creation and invention.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the journal, Globalizations.
Autorenporträt
Anna M. Agathangelou is Professor of Politics at York University. She is the co-editor (with Kyle D. Killian) of Time, Temporality and Violence in International Relations: (De)fatalizing the Present, Forging Radical Alternatives (2016) Routledge; co-author with L.H.M. Ling of Transforming World Politics: From Empire to Multiple Worlds, and author of The Global Political Economy of Sex: Desire, Violence and Insecurity in Mediterranean Nation-States. Kyle D. Killian is a licensed family therapist, Professor, and Clinical Supervisor who publishes in the areas of trauma, resilience, professional self-care, and intercultural relationships. His books include Interracial Couples, Intimacy & Therapy and Intercultural Couples: Exploring Diversity in Intimate Relationships. Dr. Killian blogs at Psychology Today.