Anthropocene Days
- environment history studynatural essays
- Categories:Historical Study World Essays, Poetry & Correspondence
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:February,2023
- Pages:228
- Retail Price:(Unknown)
- Size:150mm×225mm
- Page Views:133
- Words:(Unknown)
- Star Ratings:
- Text Color:Black and white
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Feature
★Based on academic thinking, this book records fragments of the past lives of 27 the author through subtle and perceptive observations of life, from which we can understand the way humans experience the environment, and trigger in-depth thinking about how ordinary people face the changes of the earth.
Description
Anthropocene Days gathers 27 easy-to-read short essays about the environment and climate change in everyday life. While the world and governments are beset by the great woes of changing climate, deforestation, species extinction, air pollution, fouling oceans and so on, we go about individually and locally as best we can from day to day. Anthropocene Days contends that these two domains, so apparently separate, are essentially connected.
The book looks at the diverse and mundane activities of daily life to show how the environment is experienced, and does this very personally by drawing its observations from the author’s life. It is part memoir, part recent history – a medley of short essays with themes of landscape change, forests, trees, war, fire, pestilence and the domestic life of housing, dusting and clutter. Motivated by present concerns, some reach back to the 1940s. They are set in Australia, Britain, India, Singapore and America.
Anthropocene Days is a deceptively easy read. It does not hector readers on what to do, but its ruminations, drawn from long engagement with environments, encourage reflection on how we pass our everyday lives while the planet changes.
Author
Contents
Wartime Days
Becoming a Forester
Transforming Landscapes
Presence of History
Trees
Wood
Kindness, Cruelty and Efficiency
Promise and Practice
Under the Banyan Tree
Bushfires
Going to the Cinema
The Bush Capital
Dust and Dusting
Trotsky, Stalin and my Solar Panels
Mulligans Flat
Returning to Braudel
Looking for Meaning
Going to Kew Gardens
Finding Eden in a Cornish Pit
Two Singapore Gardens
Stuff
Other People
Wurundjeri in the Park
Going on Demos
Pestilence Days
Reading in the Shade, an Ending