This book seeks to investigate the relations between human and more-than-human worlds against the backdrop of the Anthropocene, examining the way in which the Anthropocene offers a framing of collective anthropogenic ecological crises and is an invitation to re-evaluate human influence and interaction with the world around us.
This book seeks to investigate the relations between human and more-than-human worlds against the backdrop of the Anthropocene, examining the way in which the Anthropocene offers a framing of collective anthropogenic ecological crises and is an invitation to re-evaluate human influence and interaction with the world around us.
Matthew Adams is based in the School of Applied Social Science at the University of Brighton, UK. His previous books include Ecological Crisis, Sustainability & the Psychosocial Subject (2016) and Self & Social Change (2007).
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Chapter 1. Welcome to the Anthropocene: A parenthesis of infinitesimal brevity Chapter 2. Why Pavlov's dogs still matter: Animals, experimental psychology and the Anthropocene invitation Chapter 3. Eating animals in the Anthropocene: the broiler chicken, speciesism and vegatopia Chapter 4. Crafting new human-animal attachments: Do Anthropoceneans dream of eclectic sheep? Chapter 5. Heartbreaking losses in real places: Losing and finding solace in the Anthropocene Chapter 6. Between the whale and the kauri tree: multi-species encounters, indigenous knowledge and ethical relationality in the Anthropocene Afterword
Preface Chapter 1. Welcome to the Anthropocene: A parenthesis of infinitesimal brevity Chapter 2. Why Pavlov's dogs still matter: Animals, experimental psychology and the Anthropocene invitation Chapter 3. Eating animals in the Anthropocene: the broiler chicken, speciesism and vegatopia Chapter 4. Crafting new human-animal attachments: Do Anthropoceneans dream of eclectic sheep? Chapter 5. Heartbreaking losses in real places: Losing and finding solace in the Anthropocene Chapter 6. Between the whale and the kauri tree: multi-species encounters, indigenous knowledge and ethical relationality in the Anthropocene Afterword
Preface Chapter 1. Welcome to the Anthropocene: A parenthesis of infinitesimal brevity Chapter 2. Why Pavlov's dogs still matter: Animals, experimental psychology and the Anthropocene invitation Chapter 3. Eating animals in the Anthropocene: the broiler chicken, speciesism and vegatopia Chapter 4. Crafting new human-animal attachments: Do Anthropoceneans dream of eclectic sheep? Chapter 5. Heartbreaking losses in real places: Losing and finding solace in the Anthropocene Chapter 6. Between the whale and the kauri tree: multi-species encounters, indigenous knowledge and ethical relationality in the Anthropocene Afterword
Preface Chapter 1. Welcome to the Anthropocene: A parenthesis of infinitesimal brevity Chapter 2. Why Pavlov's dogs still matter: Animals, experimental psychology and the Anthropocene invitation Chapter 3. Eating animals in the Anthropocene: the broiler chicken, speciesism and vegatopia Chapter 4. Crafting new human-animal attachments: Do Anthropoceneans dream of eclectic sheep? Chapter 5. Heartbreaking losses in real places: Losing and finding solace in the Anthropocene Chapter 6. Between the whale and the kauri tree: multi-species encounters, indigenous knowledge and ethical relationality in the Anthropocene Afterword
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