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Das Anthropozän Unbewusste: Klimakatastrophenkultur

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Artikelzustand
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Release Year
2021
Book Title
The Anthropocene Unconscious: Climate Catastrophe Culture
ISBN
9781839760471

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Verso Books
ISBN-10
1839760478
ISBN-13
9781839760471
eBay Product ID (ePID)
3050416690

Product Key Features

Number of Pages
176 Pages
Publication Name
Anthropocene Unconscious : Climate Catastrophe Culture
Language
English
Subject
Subjects & Themes / Nature, Linguistics / General, Public Policy / Environmental Policy, Books & Reading
Publication Year
2021
Type
Textbook
Author
Mark Bould
Subject Area
Literary Criticism, Political Science, Language Arts & Disciplines
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
0.7 in
Item Weight
8.4 Oz
Item Length
8.1 in
Item Width
5.3 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2021-037140
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
"A scintillating work of boisterous melancholy." --China Miéville, author of October "Mark Bould's provocation kicks off a thrill-ride roller coaster of ideas, speeding us from one savvy insight to another about culture in the era of climate change. An essential read for anyone wanting to better understand what we know and don't know about what comes next." --Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures "If The Anthropocene Unconscious weren't so fun to read, it might be too terrifying to think about. This is a book people will be quoting for the next twenty years." --Gerry Canavan, co-editor of Green Planets "Bould's work is as impactful in the twenty-first century as Jacques Derrida's landmark thesis of nuclear culture was three decades ago." --Anindita Banerjee, author of We Modern People "Brilliant. A sharp, original, irreverent, and deadly serious exploration of climate's pervasive presence in all modern culture. Bould's critical elicitation of climate change across a wide range of genres, places and texts offers a novel methodology for reading, categorizing, and interpreting Anthropocene culture and the banal monstrosities of its attendant carbon capitalism. The result is a highly prescient critique of its root causes and a better means to fully realize the past, present and future effects of its unfolding catastrophes." --Graeme Macdonald, University of Warwick "A vision from the future, a retrospective analysis of our present situation, a requiem for a world we have already lost. This is a deeply personal missive--and one that carries a powerful message: we conflate the fact and fiction of global destruction at our peril." --John Gilbey, Times Higher Education "[Bould] is particularly good on film and its qualities ... while [his] critical arguments are carefully made, he is clear that his method includes reading an awareness of the Anthropocene into the cultural gems he examines." --Jon Turney, The Arts Desk "Worthy and timely ... [ The Anthropocene Unconscious ] provide[s] us with a cultural critique that has the potential to reshape the way we think about all cultural forms, and the climate--literally--in which they are produced." --Leila Sackur, It's Freezing in LA "Ebullient ... meshing high-theory with casual lyricism ... Bould's eco-socialist commitments seem increasingly inescapable." --Lola Seaton, New Statesman "A swift, wide sweep ... the book's central argument is vital: our culture is submerged in climate catastrophe." --Oscar Rickett, i newspaper, "A scintillating work of boisterous melancholy." --China Miéville, author of October "Mark Bould's provocation kicks off a thrill-ride roller coaster of ideas, speeding us from one savvy insight to another about culture in the era of climate change. An essential read for anyone wanting to better understand what we know and don't know about what comes next." --Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures "If The Anthropocene Unconscious weren't so fun to read, it might be too terrifying to think about. This is a book people will be quoting for the next twenty years." --Gerry Canavan, co-editor of Green Planets "Bould's work is as impactful in the twenty-first century as Jacques Derrida's landmark thesis of nuclear culture was three decades ago." --Anindita Banerjee, author of We Modern People "Brilliant. A sharp, original, irreverent, and deadly serious exploration of climate's pervasive presence in all modern culture. Bould's critical elicitation of climate change across a wide range of genres, places and texts offers a novel methodology for reading, categorizing, and interpreting Anthropocene culture and the banal monstrosities of its attendant carbon capitalism. The result is a highly prescient critique of its root causes and a better means to fully realize the past, present and future effects of its unfolding catastrophes." --Graeme Macdonald, University of Warwick "A vision from the future, a retrospective analysis of our present situation, a requiem for a world we have already lost. This is a deeply personal missive--and one that carries a powerful message: we conflate the fact and fiction of global destruction at our peril." --John Gilbey, Times Higher Education "[Bould] is particularly good on film and its qualities ... while [his] critical arguments are carefully made, he is clear that his method includes reading an awareness of the Anthropocene into the cultural gems he examines." --Jon Turney, The Arts Desk "Worthy and timely ... [ The Anthropocene Unconscious ] provide[s] us with a cultural critique that has the potential to reshape the way we think about all cultural forms, and the climate--literally--in which they are produced." --Leila Sackur, It's Freezing in LA "Ebullient ... meshing high-theory with casual lyricism ... Bould's eco-socialist commitments seem increasingly inescapable." --Lola Seaton, New Statesman "A swift, wide sweep ... the book's central argument is vital: our culture is submerged in climate catastrophe." --Oscar Rickett, i newspaper "Climate change, to Bould, is always on the peripheries of art, even if we can't confront it face-on, even if we would like to forget it, even when we think we were safe" --Lauren Sneade, Economy, Land & Climate Insight "Bould puts forward a compelling argument about what cultural criticism in the Anthropocene should be, and he does so with the hope of curtailing some of the slow violence and injustices of the many widely and unevenly distributed effects of climate change." --Alison Sperling, Los Angeles Review of Books "A clear call to action, an attempt to awaken us from our slumber." -- Science Fiction Studies, "A scintillating work of boisterous melancholy." --China Miéville, author of October "Mark Bould's provocation kicks off a thrill-ride roller coaster of ideas, speeding us from one savvy insight to another about culture in the era of climate change. An essential read for anyone wanting to better understand what we know and don't know about what comes next." --Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures "If The Anthropocene Unconscious weren't so fun to read, it might be too terrifying to think about. This is a book people will be quoting for the next twenty years." --Gerry Canavan, co-editor of Green Planets "Bould's work is as impactful in the twenty-first century as Jacques Derrida's landmark thesis of nuclear culture was three decades ago." --Anindita Banerjee, author of We Modern People "Brilliant. A sharp, original, irreverent, and deadly serious exploration of climate's pervasive presence in all modern culture. Bould's critical elicitation of climate change across a wide range of genres, places and texts offers a novel methodology for reading, categorizing, and interpreting Anthropocene culture and the banal monstrosities of its attendant carbon capitalism. The result is a highly prescient critique of its root causes and a better means to fully realize the past, present and future effects of its unfolding catastrophes." --Graeme Macdonald, University of Warwick "A vision from the future, a retrospective analysis of our present situation, a requiem for a world we have already lost. This is a deeply personal missive--and one that carries a powerful message: we conflate the fact and fiction of global destruction at our peril." --John Gilbey, Times Higher Education "[Bould] is particularly good on film and its qualities ... while [his] critical arguments are carefully made, he is clear that his method includes reading an awareness of the Anthropocene into the cultural gems he examines." --Jon Turney, The Arts Desk "Worthy and timely ... [ The Anthropocene Unconscious ] provide[s] us with a cultural critique that has the potential to reshape the way we think about all cultural forms, and the climate--literally--in which they are produced." --Leila Sackur, It's Freezing in LA "Ebullient ... meshing high-theory with casual lyricism ... Bould's eco-socialist commitments seem increasingly inescapable." --Lola Seaton, New Statesman "A swift, wide sweep ... the book's central argument is vital: our culture is submerged in climate catastrophe." --Oscar Rickett, i newspaper "Climate change, to Bould, is always on the peripheries of art, even if we can't confront it face-on, even if we would like to forget it, even when we think we were safe" --Lauren Sneade, Economy, Land & Climate Insight "Bould puts forward a compelling argument about what cultural criticism in the Anthropocene should be, and he does so with the hope of curtailing some of the slow violence and injustices of the many widely and unevenly distributed effects of climate change." --Alison Sperling, Los Angeles Review of Books, "A scintillating work of boisterous melancholy." --China Miéville, author of October "Mark Bould's provocation kicks off a thrill-ride roller coaster of ideas, speeding us from one savvy insight to another about culture in the era of climate change. An essential read for anyone wanting to better understand what we know and don't know about what comes next." --Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures "If The Anthropocene Unconscious weren't so fun to read, it might be too terrifying to think about. This is a book people will be quoting for the next twenty years." --Gerry Canavan, co-editor of Green Planets "Bould's work is as impactful in the twenty-first century as Jacques Derrida's landmark thesis of nuclear culture was three decades ago." --Anindita Banerjee, author of We Modern People "Brilliant. A sharp, original, irreverent, and deadly serious exploration of climate's pervasive presence in all modern culture. Bould's critical elicitation of climate change across a wide range of genres, places and texts offers a novel methodology for reading, categorizing, and interpreting Anthropocene culture and the banal monstrosities of its attendant carbon capitalism. The result is a highly prescient critique of its root causes and a better means to fully realize the past, present and future effects of its unfolding catastrophes." --Graeme Macdonald, University of Warwick "A vision from the future, a retrospective analysis of our present situation, a requiem for a world we have already lost. This is a deeply personal missive--and one that carries a powerful message: we conflate the fact and fiction of global destruction at our peril." --John Gilbey, Times Higher Education "[Bould] is particularly good on film and its qualities ... while [his] critical arguments are carefully made, he is clear that his method includes reading an awareness of the Anthropocene into the cultural gems he examines." --Jon Turney, The Arts Desk "Worthy and timely ... [ The Anthropocene Unconscious ] provide[s] us with a cultural critique that has the potential to reshape the way we think about all cultural forms, and the climate--literally--in which they are produced." --Leila Sackur, It's Freezing in LA, "A scintillating work of boisterous melancholy." --China Miéville, author of October "Mark Bould's provocation kicks off a thrill-ride roller coaster of ideas, speeding us from one savvy insight to another about culture in the era of climate change. An essential read for anyone wanting to better understand what we know and don't know about what comes next." --Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures "If The Anthropocene Unconscious weren't so fun to read, it might be too terrifying to think about. This is a book people will be quoting for the next twenty years." --Gerry Canavan, co-editor of Green Planets "Bould's work is as impactful in the twenty-first century as Jacques Derrida's landmark thesis of nuclear culture was three decades ago." --Anindita Banerjee, author of We Modern People "Brilliant. A sharp, original, irreverent, and deadly serious exploration of climate's pervasive presence in all modern culture. Bould's critical elicitation of climate change across a wide range of genres, places and texts offers a novel methodology for reading, categorizing, and interpreting Anthropocene culture and the banal monstrosities of its attendant carbon capitalism. The result is a highly prescient critique of its root causes and a better means to fully realize the past, present and future effects of its unfolding catastrophes." --Graeme Macdonald, University of Warwick
TitleLeading
The
Dewey Decimal
302.23
Synopsis
From Ducks, Newburyport to zombie movies and the Fast and Furious franchise, how climate anxiety permeates our culture The art and literature of our time is pregnant with catastrophe, with weather and water, wildness and weirdness. The Anthropocene - the term given to this geological epoch in which humans, anthropos, are wreaking havoc on the earth - is to be found bubbling away everywhere in contemporary cultural production. Typically, discussions of how culture registers, figures and mediates climate change focus on 'climate fiction' or 'cli-fi', but The Anthropocene Unconscious is more interested in how the Anthropocene and especially anthropogenic climate destabilisation manifests in texts that are not overtly about climate change - that is, unconsciously. The Anthropocene, Mark Bould argues, constitutes the unconscious of 'the art and literature of our time'. Tracing the outlines of the Anthropocene unconscious in a range of film, television and literature - across a range of genres and with utter disregard for high-low culture distinctions - this playful and riveting book draws out some of the things that are repressed and obscured by the term 'the Anthropocene', including capital, class, imperialism, inequality, alienation, violence, commodification, patriarchy and racial formations. The Anthropocene Unconscious is about a kind of rewriting. It asks: what happens when we stop assuming that the text is not about the anthropogenic biosphere crises engulfing us? What if all the stories we tell are stories about the Anthropocene? About climate change?
LC Classification Number
P96.C58B68 2021

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