Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Excellent." -- Robert Macfarlane * The Guardian *
"I can’t recall another book that positions the present global crisis in Earth’s deep history so well, in a form that can be readily understood by non-specialists. Every ecosocialist should read it." * Climate and Capitalism *
"The first book you would want to read to find out the origins, philosophies, and debate surrounding the 'Anthropocene'. . . . A fascinating tour of natural history." * Capitalism Nature Socialism *
“Jeremy Davies' concise, erudite and highly-engaging book, The Birth of the Anthropocene, will, I am sure, soon be regarded as one of the best introductions to this new and rapidly evolving field. All [readers] will certainly appreciate Davies' knack for making the complex comprehendible and the daunting manageable.” -- Andrew Peterson * World History Connected *
"Elegant and concise . . . alert to the new relationship that needs to be forged between culture and climate change.” * Times Literary Supplement *
"A modest book of giant ambition... Davies’ work takes us on a much deeper dive into the history of the Earth itself." * The Quarterly Review of Biology *
"Perhaps the best guide so far to the different senses and timeframes attached to the term [Anthropocene].” * London Review of Books *
"Geological knowledge is mixed with political ideas without losing objectivity.... Davies introduces the difficulties of defining geological change, and contextualizes events within a proper time scale." * Conservation Biology *
"An excellent commentary, which will serve both committed scholars and early undergraduates equally well . . . Davies’ most impressive accomplishment in this book is his ability to ease readers into the key contemporary debates." * Journal of Interdisciplinary History *
"This lucid and well-argued book stands out for the detailed seriousness and scholarship with which, against all the looser appropriations of the term now current, it considers the meaning of ‘the Anthropocene’." * Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism *
"The Birth of the Anthropocene is a sweeping and ambitious positioning of our current place in the Earth’s long history. . . . Davies’ method of periodization carries him through to a new and persuasive way of thinking about the Anthropocene." * Journal of World History *

Table of Contents
Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Living in Deep Time
2. Versions of the Anthropocene
3. Geology of the Future
4. Th e Rungs on the Ladder
5. An Obituary for the Holocene
Conclusion: Not Even Past

Notes
Index

The Birth of the Anthropocene

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 4 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Jeremy Davies

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      View other formats and editions of The Birth of the Anthropocene by Jeremy Davies

      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 01/02/2018
      ISBN13: 9780520289987, 978-0520289987
      ISBN10: 0520289986

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "Excellent." -- Robert Macfarlane * The Guardian *
      "I can’t recall another book that positions the present global crisis in Earth’s deep history so well, in a form that can be readily understood by non-specialists. Every ecosocialist should read it." * Climate and Capitalism *
      "The first book you would want to read to find out the origins, philosophies, and debate surrounding the 'Anthropocene'. . . . A fascinating tour of natural history." * Capitalism Nature Socialism *
      “Jeremy Davies' concise, erudite and highly-engaging book, The Birth of the Anthropocene, will, I am sure, soon be regarded as one of the best introductions to this new and rapidly evolving field. All [readers] will certainly appreciate Davies' knack for making the complex comprehendible and the daunting manageable.” -- Andrew Peterson * World History Connected *
      "Elegant and concise . . . alert to the new relationship that needs to be forged between culture and climate change.” * Times Literary Supplement *
      "A modest book of giant ambition... Davies’ work takes us on a much deeper dive into the history of the Earth itself." * The Quarterly Review of Biology *
      "Perhaps the best guide so far to the different senses and timeframes attached to the term [Anthropocene].” * London Review of Books *
      "Geological knowledge is mixed with political ideas without losing objectivity.... Davies introduces the difficulties of defining geological change, and contextualizes events within a proper time scale." * Conservation Biology *
      "An excellent commentary, which will serve both committed scholars and early undergraduates equally well . . . Davies’ most impressive accomplishment in this book is his ability to ease readers into the key contemporary debates." * Journal of Interdisciplinary History *
      "This lucid and well-argued book stands out for the detailed seriousness and scholarship with which, against all the looser appropriations of the term now current, it considers the meaning of ‘the Anthropocene’." * Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism *
      "The Birth of the Anthropocene is a sweeping and ambitious positioning of our current place in the Earth’s long history. . . . Davies’ method of periodization carries him through to a new and persuasive way of thinking about the Anthropocene." * Journal of World History *

      Table of Contents
      Contents

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      1. Living in Deep Time
      2. Versions of the Anthropocene
      3. Geology of the Future
      4. Th e Rungs on the Ladder
      5. An Obituary for the Holocene
      Conclusion: Not Even Past

      Notes
      Index

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