ABSTRACT

The Anthropocene is a volatile and potentially catastrophic age demanding new ways of thinking about relations between humans and the nonhuman world. This book explores how responses to environmental challenges are hampered by a grief for a pristine and certain past, rather than considering the scale of the necessary socioeconomic change for a 'future' world. Conceptualisations of human-nature relations must recognise both human power and its embeddedness within material relations. Hope is a risky and complex process of possibility that carries painful emotions; it is something to be practised rather than felt. As centralised governmental solutions regarding climate change appear insufficient, intellectual and practical resources can be derived from everyday understandings and practices. Empirical examples from rural and urban contexts and with diverse research participants - indigenous communities, climate scientists, weed managers, suburban householders - help us to consider capacity, vulnerability and hope in new ways.

chapter 1|20 pages

The spectre of catastrophe

chapter 2|17 pages

Grief will be our companion

chapter 3|16 pages

Past, present and future temporalities

chapter 4|20 pages

More than human, more than nature

chapter 5|19 pages

Practising hope

chapter 7|18 pages

Living with weeds

chapter 8|16 pages

Governing the ungovernable? 1

chapter 9|18 pages

Beyond fortress and sprawl

Retrofitting cities, suburbs and households

chapter 10|8 pages

The Anthropoceneans