Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Extinction Studies collects haunting and haunted multivoiced stories that echo together in a vibrant plea for an ethic of care, lucidity, and obstinate, stammering hope. We need such stories to make us feel and think with the unraveling of a world we inherit and share together with innumerable entangled forms and ways of life. We need them also to repopulate our devastated imaginations and to help us escape the twin easy temptations of nihilist despair and blind confidence. -- Isabelle Stengers, author of Cosmopolitics This extraordinary collection addresses one of the most sobering aspects of the current environmental crisis. The contributing scholars use narrative as the vehicle for their historical, ethnographic, zoological, meditative, and poetic insights. The result is both personal and scholarly, both illuminating and a pleasure to read. -- Harriet Ritvo, Arthur J. Conner Professor of History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Extinction Studies makes an important contribution to human-animal studies and the environmental humanities as the volume explores what extinctions and recoveries of endangered animal species mean in different cultural contexts. These perceptive and wide-ranging essays focus on the narrative and philosophical frameworks that turn the ecological reduction of bioabundance and biodiversity into sources of reflection about human and more-than-human ways of life as they unfold across generations and evolutionary ages. These analyses and meditations acknowledge both that animals can never be fully assimilated to human understanding, and that human stories play a crucial role in shaping the bonds with animals that take multispecies communities into a future of danger, but also of hope and exuberance. -- Ursula K. Heise, Marcia H. Howard Chair in Literary Studies, University of California, Los Angeles Human-caused extinction challenges our own survival-but also our compassion and our ability to tell stories adequate to shifting configurations of 'us' and 'them.' This volume gathers seven fine storytellers who show us what it means to lose or save another animal species in an era of rapid extinctions. These are tales of passion, time, conflict, learning, slaughter, imprisonment, and prayer. Drawing upon their common membership in an interdisciplinary and international working group on extinction studies, the authors show the potential of the environmental humanities to address one of the major crises of our moment in history. -- Anna Tsing, University of California, Santa Cruz The studies contained in this volume cross species and kingdom boundaries, and are full of hope just as much as grief and mourning. In bearing witness to the lives of species that are functionally and/or already extinct, the authors present multiple modes of response and responsibility for those of us who remain. -- Brett Buchanan, associate professor of philosophy and director of the School of the Environment at Laurentian University

Table of Contents
Foreword, by Cary Wolfe Introduction: Telling Extinction Stories, by Deborah Bird Rose, Thom van Dooren, and Matthew Chrulew 1. Walking with Okami, the Large-Mouthed Pure God, by James Hatley 2. Saving the Golden Lion Tamarin, by Matthew Chrulew 3. Extinction in a Distant Land: The Question of Elliot's Bird of Paradise, by Rick De Vos 4. Monk Seals at the Edge: Blessings in a Time of Peril, by Deborah Bird Rose 5. Encountering Leatherbacks in Multispecies Knots of Time, by Michelle Bastian 6. Spectral Crows in Hawai'i: Conservation and the Work of Inheritance, by Thom van Dooren Afterword: It Is an Entire World That Has Disappeared, by Vinciane Despret Contributors Index

Extinction Studies

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    A Paperback / softback by Deborah Bird Rose, Thom van Dooren, Matthew Chrulew

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 02/05/2017
      ISBN13: 9780231178815, 978-0231178815
      ISBN10: 0231178816

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Extinction Studies collects haunting and haunted multivoiced stories that echo together in a vibrant plea for an ethic of care, lucidity, and obstinate, stammering hope. We need such stories to make us feel and think with the unraveling of a world we inherit and share together with innumerable entangled forms and ways of life. We need them also to repopulate our devastated imaginations and to help us escape the twin easy temptations of nihilist despair and blind confidence. -- Isabelle Stengers, author of Cosmopolitics This extraordinary collection addresses one of the most sobering aspects of the current environmental crisis. The contributing scholars use narrative as the vehicle for their historical, ethnographic, zoological, meditative, and poetic insights. The result is both personal and scholarly, both illuminating and a pleasure to read. -- Harriet Ritvo, Arthur J. Conner Professor of History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Extinction Studies makes an important contribution to human-animal studies and the environmental humanities as the volume explores what extinctions and recoveries of endangered animal species mean in different cultural contexts. These perceptive and wide-ranging essays focus on the narrative and philosophical frameworks that turn the ecological reduction of bioabundance and biodiversity into sources of reflection about human and more-than-human ways of life as they unfold across generations and evolutionary ages. These analyses and meditations acknowledge both that animals can never be fully assimilated to human understanding, and that human stories play a crucial role in shaping the bonds with animals that take multispecies communities into a future of danger, but also of hope and exuberance. -- Ursula K. Heise, Marcia H. Howard Chair in Literary Studies, University of California, Los Angeles Human-caused extinction challenges our own survival-but also our compassion and our ability to tell stories adequate to shifting configurations of 'us' and 'them.' This volume gathers seven fine storytellers who show us what it means to lose or save another animal species in an era of rapid extinctions. These are tales of passion, time, conflict, learning, slaughter, imprisonment, and prayer. Drawing upon their common membership in an interdisciplinary and international working group on extinction studies, the authors show the potential of the environmental humanities to address one of the major crises of our moment in history. -- Anna Tsing, University of California, Santa Cruz The studies contained in this volume cross species and kingdom boundaries, and are full of hope just as much as grief and mourning. In bearing witness to the lives of species that are functionally and/or already extinct, the authors present multiple modes of response and responsibility for those of us who remain. -- Brett Buchanan, associate professor of philosophy and director of the School of the Environment at Laurentian University

      Table of Contents
      Foreword, by Cary Wolfe Introduction: Telling Extinction Stories, by Deborah Bird Rose, Thom van Dooren, and Matthew Chrulew 1. Walking with Okami, the Large-Mouthed Pure God, by James Hatley 2. Saving the Golden Lion Tamarin, by Matthew Chrulew 3. Extinction in a Distant Land: The Question of Elliot's Bird of Paradise, by Rick De Vos 4. Monk Seals at the Edge: Blessings in a Time of Peril, by Deborah Bird Rose 5. Encountering Leatherbacks in Multispecies Knots of Time, by Michelle Bastian 6. Spectral Crows in Hawai'i: Conservation and the Work of Inheritance, by Thom van Dooren Afterword: It Is an Entire World That Has Disappeared, by Vinciane Despret Contributors Index

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