Anthropocene Islands: Entangled Worlds

┬╖ University of Westminster Press
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'A must read тАж a new analytical agenda for the Anthropocene, coherently drawing out the power of thinking with islands.' тАУ┬аElena Burgos Martinez, Leiden University

тАШThis is an essential book. [The] analytics they propose тАж offer both a critical agenda for island studies and compass points through which to navigate the haunting past, troubling present, and precarious future.тАЩ тАУ┬аCraig Santos Perez, University of HawaiтАЩi, Manoa

тАШAll academic books should be like this: hard to put down. Informative, careful, sometimes devasting, yet absolutely necessary - if you read one book about the Anthropocene let it be this. You will never think of islands in the same way again.тАЩ тАУ┬аKimberley Peters, University of Oldenburg

тАШ тАж a unique journey into the Anthropocene. Critical, generous and compellingтАЩ. тАФ┬аNigel Clark, Lancaster University

The island has become a key figure of the Anthropocene тАУ an epoch in which human entanglements with nature come increasingly to the fore. For a long time, islands were romanticised or marginalised, seen as lacking modernityтАЩs capacities for progress, vulnerable to the effects of catastrophic climate change and the afterlives of empire and coloniality. Today, however, the island is increasingly important for both policy-oriented and critical imaginaries that seek, more positively, to draw upon the islandтАЩs liminal and disruptive capacities, especially the relational entanglements and sensitivities its peoples and modes of life are said to exhibit.

Anthropocene Islands: Entangled Worlds┬аexplores the significant and widespread shift to working with islands for the generation of new or alternative approaches to knowledge, critique and policy practices. It explains how contemporary Anthropocene thinking takes a particular interest in islands as тАШentangled worldsтАЩ, which break down the human/nature divide of modernity and enable the generation of new or alternative approaches to ways of being (ontology) and knowing (epistemology). The book draws out core analytics which have risen to prominence (Resilience, Patchworks, Correlation and Storiation) as contemporary policy makers, scholars, critical theorists, artists, poets and activists work with islands to move beyond the constraints of modern approaches. In doing so, it argues that engaging with islands has become increasingly important for the generation of some of the core frameworks of contemporary thinking and concludes with a new critical agenda for the Anthropocene.

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JONATHAN PUGH is Reader in Island Studies, University of Newcastle, UK. He is the author of over 70 publications developing relational thinking with islands and, more recently, the figure of the island in the Anthropocene. He leads the тАШAnthropocene IslandsтАЩ initiative: https://www.anthropoceneislands.online.

DAVID CHANDLER is Professor of International Relations, University of Westminster. He edits the journal Anthropocenes: Human, Inhuman, Posthuman. His recent books include Becoming Indigenous: Governing Imaginaries in the Anthropocene (2019) and Ontopolitics in the Anthropocene: An Introduction to Mapping, Sensing and Hacking (2018).

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