Time, Climate Change, Global Racial Capitalism and Decolonial Planetary Ecologies
Herausgeber: Agathangelou, Anna M.; Killian, Kyle D.
Time, Climate Change, Global Racial Capitalism and Decolonial Planetary Ecologies
Herausgeber: Agathangelou, Anna M.; Killian, Kyle D.
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This book probes the interconnections of time and ecology in order to spark our imagination and re-think a planetary, and ecology, otherwise.
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This book probes the interconnections of time and ecology in order to spark our imagination and re-think a planetary, and ecology, otherwise.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Rethinking Globalizations
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 174
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 174mm x 246mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 510g
- ISBN-13: 9781032235219
- ISBN-10: 1032235217
- Artikelnr.: 69791981
- Rethinking Globalizations
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 174
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 174mm x 246mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 510g
- ISBN-13: 9781032235219
- ISBN-10: 1032235217
- Artikelnr.: 69791981
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.
Preface Introduction: About time: climate change and inventions of the
decolonial, planetarity and radical existence PART I: The question of
radical existence 1. Humility in the Anthropocene 2. Submerged
perspectives: the arts of land and water defense 3. Beyond the secular
Anthropocene: Locke's self-owning body, protestant translations of
indigenous world-making, and the settler-colonial plantation economy 4. On
the question of time, racial capitalism, and the planetary 5. Indigenous
resistance, planetary dystopia, and the politics of environmental justice
PART II: Profound challenges of climate change and climate science 6.
Beyond the premise of conquest: Indigenous and Black earth-worlds in the
Anthropocene debates 7. Multiple Anthropocenes: pluralizing space-time as a
response to 'the Anthropocene' 8. A puzzle: the environment/development
constellation in Madagascar 9. Time to change? Technologies of futuring and
transformative change in Nepal's climate change policy 10. Financialization
and suburbanization: the predatory hegemony of suburban-financial nexus in
Istanbul 11. Producing nationalized futures of climate change and science
in India 12. Connecting human and planetary health: interview with
Christiana Figueres PART III: Radical existence and ecological imaginaries
13. Welcome to the Anthropocene: Gregory Bateson, disaster porn, Swamp
Thing, and 'The Green' 14. 'Welcome to Mars': space colonization,
anticipatory authoritarianism, and the labour of hope 15. Poems 16. Poems
17. Tipping Point: Kay S. Lawrence's exhibition on climate emergency 18.
'Do not go gentle into that good night': the Anthropecene and the cyclical
time of human suffering 19. Conversations on education, time and the
planetary
decolonial, planetarity and radical existence PART I: The question of
radical existence 1. Humility in the Anthropocene 2. Submerged
perspectives: the arts of land and water defense 3. Beyond the secular
Anthropocene: Locke's self-owning body, protestant translations of
indigenous world-making, and the settler-colonial plantation economy 4. On
the question of time, racial capitalism, and the planetary 5. Indigenous
resistance, planetary dystopia, and the politics of environmental justice
PART II: Profound challenges of climate change and climate science 6.
Beyond the premise of conquest: Indigenous and Black earth-worlds in the
Anthropocene debates 7. Multiple Anthropocenes: pluralizing space-time as a
response to 'the Anthropocene' 8. A puzzle: the environment/development
constellation in Madagascar 9. Time to change? Technologies of futuring and
transformative change in Nepal's climate change policy 10. Financialization
and suburbanization: the predatory hegemony of suburban-financial nexus in
Istanbul 11. Producing nationalized futures of climate change and science
in India 12. Connecting human and planetary health: interview with
Christiana Figueres PART III: Radical existence and ecological imaginaries
13. Welcome to the Anthropocene: Gregory Bateson, disaster porn, Swamp
Thing, and 'The Green' 14. 'Welcome to Mars': space colonization,
anticipatory authoritarianism, and the labour of hope 15. Poems 16. Poems
17. Tipping Point: Kay S. Lawrence's exhibition on climate emergency 18.
'Do not go gentle into that good night': the Anthropecene and the cyclical
time of human suffering 19. Conversations on education, time and the
planetary
Preface Introduction: About time: climate change and inventions of the
decolonial, planetarity and radical existence PART I: The question of
radical existence 1. Humility in the Anthropocene 2. Submerged
perspectives: the arts of land and water defense 3. Beyond the secular
Anthropocene: Locke's self-owning body, protestant translations of
indigenous world-making, and the settler-colonial plantation economy 4. On
the question of time, racial capitalism, and the planetary 5. Indigenous
resistance, planetary dystopia, and the politics of environmental justice
PART II: Profound challenges of climate change and climate science 6.
Beyond the premise of conquest: Indigenous and Black earth-worlds in the
Anthropocene debates 7. Multiple Anthropocenes: pluralizing space-time as a
response to 'the Anthropocene' 8. A puzzle: the environment/development
constellation in Madagascar 9. Time to change? Technologies of futuring and
transformative change in Nepal's climate change policy 10. Financialization
and suburbanization: the predatory hegemony of suburban-financial nexus in
Istanbul 11. Producing nationalized futures of climate change and science
in India 12. Connecting human and planetary health: interview with
Christiana Figueres PART III: Radical existence and ecological imaginaries
13. Welcome to the Anthropocene: Gregory Bateson, disaster porn, Swamp
Thing, and 'The Green' 14. 'Welcome to Mars': space colonization,
anticipatory authoritarianism, and the labour of hope 15. Poems 16. Poems
17. Tipping Point: Kay S. Lawrence's exhibition on climate emergency 18.
'Do not go gentle into that good night': the Anthropecene and the cyclical
time of human suffering 19. Conversations on education, time and the
planetary
decolonial, planetarity and radical existence PART I: The question of
radical existence 1. Humility in the Anthropocene 2. Submerged
perspectives: the arts of land and water defense 3. Beyond the secular
Anthropocene: Locke's self-owning body, protestant translations of
indigenous world-making, and the settler-colonial plantation economy 4. On
the question of time, racial capitalism, and the planetary 5. Indigenous
resistance, planetary dystopia, and the politics of environmental justice
PART II: Profound challenges of climate change and climate science 6.
Beyond the premise of conquest: Indigenous and Black earth-worlds in the
Anthropocene debates 7. Multiple Anthropocenes: pluralizing space-time as a
response to 'the Anthropocene' 8. A puzzle: the environment/development
constellation in Madagascar 9. Time to change? Technologies of futuring and
transformative change in Nepal's climate change policy 10. Financialization
and suburbanization: the predatory hegemony of suburban-financial nexus in
Istanbul 11. Producing nationalized futures of climate change and science
in India 12. Connecting human and planetary health: interview with
Christiana Figueres PART III: Radical existence and ecological imaginaries
13. Welcome to the Anthropocene: Gregory Bateson, disaster porn, Swamp
Thing, and 'The Green' 14. 'Welcome to Mars': space colonization,
anticipatory authoritarianism, and the labour of hope 15. Poems 16. Poems
17. Tipping Point: Kay S. Lawrence's exhibition on climate emergency 18.
'Do not go gentle into that good night': the Anthropecene and the cyclical
time of human suffering 19. Conversations on education, time and the
planetary