Description

Book Synopsis
Environmentalism has relentlessly warned about the dire consequences of abusing and exploiting the planet's natural resources, imagining future wastelands of ecological depletion and social chaos. But it has also generated rich new ideas about how humans might live better with nature.

Trade Review

"This subtle, lucid and measured account charts the changing and conflicting discourses of limits, sustainability, wildness, adaptation and apocalypse. With clarity and care, Lisa Garforth's distinctive use of social theory explains and counters the difficulty of thinking (beyond) crisis and the importance of the utopian lens in exploring possible futures."
Ruth Levitas, University of Bristol

"Green Utopias moves from the romantic eco-utopian interventions of the 1960s infused by hope for a redeemable nature to the realistic, yet stubbornly utopian, manoeuvres of the Anthropocene. Garforth articulates a utopian method informed by 'green hope' that 'unsettles' capitalist hegemony and enables humanity to live creatively with 'multiple ecologies and nonhuman others.' This is essential reading for all citizens of the world."
Tom Moylan, University of Limerick

"The conclusion intriguingly chooses not to choose between the various ecotopian possibilities that have been sketched out in the monograph, not even between the 'before' and 'after' nature of the title; instead, Garforth argues, we must 'greet the Anthropocene' with a multitude of strategies ranging from hope and fear to apocalypse and adaptation. [...] In such dire times, the thinking goes, we should welcome any sort of utopian hope we can muster."
Science Fiction Studies



Table of Contents
  • Chapter 1
  • Introduction: utopia, environment and nature
  • Chapter 2
  • Environmentalism: from crisis to hope
  • Chapter 3
  • Deep ecology: wild nature, radical visions
  • Chapter 4
  • Utopian fiction: imagining the sustainable society
  • Chapter 5
  • No future: green utopias between apocalypse and adaptation
  • Chapter 6
  • After nature: ecological utopianism from limits to loss
  • Chapter 7
  • Conclusion: long live the green utopia?

Green Utopias Environmental Hope Before and

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 3 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Lisa Garforth

    15 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of Green Utopias Environmental Hope Before and by Lisa Garforth

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 27/10/2017
      ISBN13: 9780745684734, 978-0745684734
      ISBN10: 0745684734

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Environmentalism has relentlessly warned about the dire consequences of abusing and exploiting the planet's natural resources, imagining future wastelands of ecological depletion and social chaos. But it has also generated rich new ideas about how humans might live better with nature.

      Trade Review

      "This subtle, lucid and measured account charts the changing and conflicting discourses of limits, sustainability, wildness, adaptation and apocalypse. With clarity and care, Lisa Garforth's distinctive use of social theory explains and counters the difficulty of thinking (beyond) crisis and the importance of the utopian lens in exploring possible futures."
      Ruth Levitas, University of Bristol

      "Green Utopias moves from the romantic eco-utopian interventions of the 1960s infused by hope for a redeemable nature to the realistic, yet stubbornly utopian, manoeuvres of the Anthropocene. Garforth articulates a utopian method informed by 'green hope' that 'unsettles' capitalist hegemony and enables humanity to live creatively with 'multiple ecologies and nonhuman others.' This is essential reading for all citizens of the world."
      Tom Moylan, University of Limerick

      "The conclusion intriguingly chooses not to choose between the various ecotopian possibilities that have been sketched out in the monograph, not even between the 'before' and 'after' nature of the title; instead, Garforth argues, we must 'greet the Anthropocene' with a multitude of strategies ranging from hope and fear to apocalypse and adaptation. [...] In such dire times, the thinking goes, we should welcome any sort of utopian hope we can muster."
      Science Fiction Studies



      Table of Contents
      • Chapter 1
      • Introduction: utopia, environment and nature
      • Chapter 2
      • Environmentalism: from crisis to hope
      • Chapter 3
      • Deep ecology: wild nature, radical visions
      • Chapter 4
      • Utopian fiction: imagining the sustainable society
      • Chapter 5
      • No future: green utopias between apocalypse and adaptation
      • Chapter 6
      • After nature: ecological utopianism from limits to loss
      • Chapter 7
      • Conclusion: long live the green utopia?

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