Video: Simon Dalby on Anthropocene Formations: Environmental Security, Geopolitics and Disaster
Simon Dalby introduces his Theory, Culture & Society article ‘Anthropocene Formations: Environmental Security, Geopolitics and Disaster‘, from the Special Issue: ‘Geosocial Formations and the Anthropocene.‘
Abstract
The discussion of the Anthropocene makes it clear that contemporary social thought can no longer take nature, or an external ‘environment’, for granted in political discussion. Humanity is remaking its own context very rapidly, not only in the processes of urbanization but also in the larger context of global biophysical transformations that provide various forms of insecurity. Disasters such as the Fukushima nuclear meltdowns and potentially disastrous plans to geoengineer the climate in coming decades highlight that the human environment is being remade in the Anthropocene. Humanity is now a geological actor, not just a biological one, and that insight, captured in the term Anthropocene, changes understandings of both security and environment in social thought, requiring a focus on production of environments rather than their protection. Disasters help clarify this key point and its significance for considering geosocial formations.
TCS Special Issue: Geosocial Formations and the Anthropocene
Volume 34 Issue 2-3, March-May 2017
Contents
Geosocial Formations and the Anthropocene
Nigel Clark Kathryn Yusoff
The Politics of Climate Change Is More Than the Politics of Capitalism
Dipesh Chakrabarty
Sex and the (Anthropocene) City
Claire Mary Colebrook
Why Gaia is not a God of Totality
Bruno Latour
Petrifying Earth Process: The Stratigraphic Imprint of Key Earth System Parameters in the Anthropocene
Jan Zalasiewicz, Will Steffen, Reinhold Leinfelder, Mark Williams, Colin Waters
Geosocial Strata
Kathryn Yusoff
An Interview with Elizabeth Grosz: Geopower, Inhumanism and the Biopolitical
Elizabeth Grosz, Kathryn Yusoff, Nigel Clark
We Are the World? Anthropocene Cultural Production between Geopoetics and Geopolitics
Angela Last
An Interview with Elizabeth Povinelli: Geontopower, Biopolitics and the Anthropocene
Elizabeth A. Povinelli, Mathew Coleman, Kathryn Yusoff
Waste, Environmental Politics and Dis/Engaged Publics
Myra J Hird
Politics of Strata
Nigel Clark
Anthropocene Formations: Environmental Security, Geopolitics and Disaster
Simon Dalby
Gods of the Anthropocene: Geo-Spiritual Formations in the Earth’s New Epoch
Bronislaw Szerszynski