"This is an excellent book. It addresses what, in both conceptual and political terms, is arguably the most important source of tension and confusion in current arguments about the environment, namely the concept of nature; and it does so in a way that is both sensitive to, and critical of, the two antithetical ways of understanding this that dominate existing discussions." <i>Russell Keat, University of Edinburgh</i> <p>"Pondering the related issues of environmental crisis and sustainability, readers will benefit greatly from close study of Kate Soper's extended essay on the discourse of nature and 'nature'." <i>W. Lukin, University of London</i></p>
Acknowledgements viii
Introduction 1
1 The Discourses of Nature 15
2 Nature, Human, and Inhuman 37
3 Nature, Friend and Foe 71
4 Nature and Sexual Politics 119
5 Nature and ‘Nature’ 149
6 The Space and Time of Nature 180
7 Loving Nature 213
8 Ecology, Nature and Responsibility 249
Index 283
In a study which engages with metaphysics, anthropology, sexual theory, environmental ethics and aesthetics of nature, What is Nature? reveals both the reactionary tendencies of a Green politics which ignores the historic and cultural dimensions of "nature", and the incoherence of cultural politics which denies its extra-discursive reality.
This is a work offered to all those who have felt the need for a discussion which registers both the independence of the non-human world and the instability and political effects of the ways it is conceptualized and culturally represented. What is Nature? is designed to appeal to students across a wide range of disciplines, and to give pleasure to anyone who has occasionally pondered on the nature of "nature".