Catastrophism
The Apocalyptic Politics of Collapse and Rebirth
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- 7,99 €
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- 7,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
Catastrophism explores the politics of apocalypse-on the left and right, in the environmental movement-and examines why the lens of catastrophe can distort the understanding of the dynamics at the heart of disasters-and fatally impedes the ability to transform the world. Lilley, McNally, Yuen and Davis probe the reasons why catastrophic thinking is so prevalent, and challenge the belief that it is only out of the ashes that a better society may be born.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Each of the four essays in this evenhanded volume examines a facet of the tendency in the "Global North" (i.e., North America and Europe) to view current events in apocalyptic terms. Yuen (Confronting Capitalism, co-editor) believes that "the ubiquity of apocalypse in recent decades has led to a banalization of the concept"; awareness of climate change, for example, has begotten apathy rather than action, and Yuen proposes a return to grassroots activism to solve this. Lilley (Capital and Its Discontents) traces the leftist history of catastrophism, as manifested in hopes of the demise of capitalism, while documentary filmmaker Davis comes at the concept from the right, exploring Judeo-Christian beliefs about disaster and how end-time ideologies tend "to shift the focus from essential questions of public policy... and onto abstractions." In the final essay, McNally (Global Slump) pegs the recent popularity of zombies as arising from "catastrophic imaginings of everyday corporeal vulnerability." The thread connecting these articles is a desire to strip the rhetoric of catastrophism from all sides so that society can confront and solve real threats, and while the prose veers from jargon to straight talk and back again, each author offers valuable contributions to the discourse.