211713

Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke

2016

315 Pages

ISBN 978-1-137-56990-5

Changing our environment, changing ourselves

nature, labour, knowledge and alienation

Edited by

James S. Ormrod

In this book, a celebration of the work of the sociologist Peter Dickens serves as the catalyst for exploring the relationship between human ‘internal nature’ (our health and psychological well-being) and ‘external nature’ (the environment on which we depend and which we collectively transform). Across contributions from Ted Benton, James Ormrod, Kate Soper, John Bellamy Foster and Brett Clark, Graham Sharp, James Addicott, Kathryn Dean and Peter Dickens himself, the book draws attention to alienation associated with the promotion ofdifferent knowledges in late capitalist production. But it also highlights the possibilities for generating less alienated relations with our environment in the future. As well as discussing the philosophical and theoretical issues involved, the book contains contemporary case studies of ultra-processed food, satellite farming, computerised thinking and dark tourism.James S. Ormrod is a Principal Lecturer in Sociology, University of Brighton, UK. His research interests are in social movements and the relationships human beings have with their environment and the universe in general. He is the author of Fantasy and Social Movements (2014) and, with Peter Dickens, Cosmic Society (2007).

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/978-1-137-56991-2

Full citation:

Ormrod, J. S. (ed) (2016). Changing our environment, changing ourselves: nature, labour, knowledge and alienation, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Ormrod James S.

1-12

Open Access Link
Peter Dickens

Benton Ted

15-35

Open Access Link
Defragmenting nature

Ormrod James S.

37-78

Open Access Link
Environmental alienation

Soper Kate

81-99

Open Access Link
Marx's universal metabolism of nature and the Frankfurt school

Bellamy Foster John; Foster John; Clark Brett

101-135

Open Access Link
Society, nature, and experience

Dickens Peter

257-287

Open Access Link

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.