<i>Cultural Histories of the Anthropocene</i> provides a guide to a new field that remains fertile but is already overgrown with a thicket of specialized terms and insider arguments. It’s comprehensive, but not in the style of a generic textbook; instead, this edited collection provides a distinct perspective on a global phenomenon. The seventeen bite-sized essays represent a complex and ongoing interdisciplinary conversation among the leading Nordic scholars whose work has done so much to make writing critical planetary histories possible. They critically analyze theories, concepts, and methods; reflect on the politics and ethics of writing <i>of</i> the Anthropocene and being a scholar <i>in </i>the Anthropocene; and they provide model ethnographic case studies and close of exhibits and texts. <i>Cultural Histories of the Anthropocene</i> will be a particularly valuable resource in undergraduate and graduate classes in the environmental humanities.

Perrin Selcer, Associate Professor, University of Michigan, USA

No cultural historian or scholar engaged with the environmental humanities can ignore the rich and diverse content of this impressive volume.

Christian Wicke, Assistant Professor, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

This open access collection is a comprehensive analysis of the challenges and contributions of cultural history to contemporary and cross-disciplinary discussions of the Anthropocene.

Organised into three key sections, this volume is a concise and critical overview of interdisciplinary research on the cultural history of the Anthropocene. The first part introduces readers to the key conceptual and theoretical challenges of Anthropocene debates, before the second part analyses a variety of case studies, to highlight how ethnography and cultural history can make certain processes visible and historically tangible. Key case studies explored by the volume range from sustainability in poultry production, to 18th century mining, to natural history and the works of Peter Christen Asbjørnsen. Finally, the third section explores 5 critical approaches to Anthropocene discourse, and the challenges it may pose to alternative styles of cultural history.

Overall, this volume offers a synthesis of conceptual, historical, and critical approaches, that when combined provide a detailed overview of the latest research surrounding the cultural history of the Anthropocene.

The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the Norwegian Research Council and the University of Bergen.

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This open access collection is a comprehensive analysis of the challenges and contributions of cultural history to contemporary and cross-disciplinary discussions of the Anthropocene.

Introduction: Writing Cultural Histories in the Anthropocene

PART I:
UNLOCKING THE FOUNDATIONS: KEY CONCEPTS IN CULTURAL HISTORY
1. Anders Ekström: Centres of Temporalization: The Tarfala Experience
2. Hugo Reinert: Fieldwork: Writing (on) a Damaged Planet
3. Helge Jordheim: Periodization in Cultural History: From the Enlightenment to the Anthropocene
4. Aike P. Rots: Rituals, Environments, and More-Than-Human Relations
5. Staffan Bergwik: Multitemporality and Cultural History of Science
6. Hedda Susanne Molland: Talking About What Anthropocene? How Conflicting Articulations May Inform Cultural History
7. Brita Brenna: Arctic Heritage: Territory, thing, and the history of it all
PART II: CASE STUDIES: CULTURAL HISTORIES IN THE ANTHROPOCENE
8. Marit Ruge Bjærke: Heading for Venus? When Bad Planets Make Good Warnings
9. Marta Arnaldi: Giacomo Leopardi in the Anthropocene: Translating the Non-Human from Animals to AI
10. Sverker Sörlin and Eric Paglia: Bounding – Economic Thought for the Anthropocene
11. Marie-Theres Federhofer: ‘Enlightened Anthropocentrism’ in Early Nineteenth-Century Geology: Henrik Steffens (1773–1845) and Leopold von Buch (1774–1853)
12. Frida Hastrup: Anthropocene Volatility. Ethnographic Discussions of Poultry
13. Siv Frøydis Berg: Don’t Try to be Human! Goethe’s Challenge of Anthropocentrism in Faust II
14. Bergsveinn Þórsson, Merve Tabur and Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay: This Thing We Call the Future: The Material Consequences of the Imagination
PART III: INTERVENTIONS: CRITICAL ENCOUNTERS BETWEEN CULTURAL HISTORY AND THE ANTHROPOCENE
15. Gro Ween, Silje Opdahl Mathisen and Åsmund Steinsholm: Control: Attempting to Tame the World
16. Dirk Johannsen: Narrative Cultures in the Anthropocene: Worldmaking as Active Inference
17. Åmund Norum Resløkken: Waiting for the Noösphere: The Cultural History in Crutzen and Stoermer’s ‘The “Anthropocene”’
18. Clemet Askheim and Trine K. Haagensen: From Worlding the Earth to Earthing the World: The Anthropocene as a New Metaphysics?
Conclusion: John Ødemark:Anthropos and Humanitas – Untranslating Cultural History for the Anthropocene

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This open access collection is a comprehensive analysis of the challenges and contributions of cultural history to contemporary and cross-disciplinary discussions of the Anthropocene.
Analyses 8 case studies ranging from sustainable poultry production, to 18th century mining, and the works of Peter Christen Asbjørnsen

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350532601
Publisert
2026-01-22
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
304

Biografisk notat

Anders Ekström is a Professor in the Department of History of Science and Ideas, Uppsala University, Sweden

Marit Ruge Bjærke is a Researcher in the Department of Archaeology, History, Cultural Studies and Religion, University of Bergen, Norway

Brita Brenna is a Professor in the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, Oslo University, Norway

John Ødemark is Professor in the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, Oslo University, Norway