03918nam 22005655 450 991095179980332120260125093345.09783031758911303175891910.1007/978-3-031-75891-1(MiAaPQ)EBC31887430(Au-PeEL)EBL31887430(CKB)37361812500041(DE-He213)978-3-031-75891-1(OCoLC)1496391718(EXLCZ)993736181250004120250124d2024 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEnvironmentalism After Humanism /edited by Stefanie Fishel, Andrew M. Rose1st ed. 2024.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2024.1 online resource (258 pages)Environmental Politics and Theory,2731-67189783031758904 3031758900 Chapter 1: What Comes After Humanism? -- Chapter 2: Speculative Worlds and Terrestrial Politics: Reframing Fictional Disasters with Latour’s Down to Earth -- Chapter 3: Posthuman Geopolitical Culture(s): Decentering the State in the Anthropocene Epoch -- Chapter 4: Environmental Activism and Ecological Citizenship: An Examination of Vibrant Matter and Distributed Agency -- Chapter 5: Working With Uncertainty -- Chapter 6: Post-Citizens at the Ends of Poetry: Bruno Latour’s Gaia faces Carol Ann Duffy’s The Bees -- Chapter 7: Suffering, Monstrosity, Exceptionality -- Chapter 8: The Trapped Elephant in the Humanitarian’s Room: Ensuring ecological justice amidst a refugee crisis -- Chapter 9: Other-worldly experiences of protected area adaptive management.This book explores the ways in which one might come to recognize and better theorize the political actor, and the political ‘act,’ or ‘event,’ in a post-anthropocentric context. The challenge to contemporary ideas of citizenship, activism, and the state stems not only from the realization that the natural world is inseparable from the social, but that both are the product of hybridized human and nonhuman agencies. As a result, one must be skeptical of any notion of an environmental fix that bases itself upon an exclusively human agency. What new types of citizenship might emerge from posthuman cultures and artforms? What do effective post-anthropocentric organizing strategies look like? As the relevance of the liberal humanist political subject and the conceptual posthuman of political realism recede, theories of national and international politics are now tasked with rethinking a contemporary environmental politics beyond humanism. To better theorize these destabilizations, this collection puts forth the value of thinking across disciplines, wherein a conversation unfolds between political theory and literary theory that meets at the crossroads of environmental humanities and ecopolitical theory. Stefanie Fishel is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia Andrew M. Rose is Assistant Professor in English at Christopher Newport University, USA.Environmental Politics and Theory,2731-6718Environmental policyInternational relationsEnvironmental PolicyInternational Relations TheoryEnvironmental policy.International relations.Environmental Policy.International Relations Theory.363.7Fishel Stefanie1792789Rose Andrew M123580MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910951799803321Environmentalism After Humanism4331821UNINA