Description

Book Synopsis

As an inquiry into engagements with forces of loss and threat, this work explores experimental ways to write about climate crisis in anthropology. From Belize to Ontario and back, this ambitious piece of ethnographic writing set during a time “beyond ruin” in a fictional, ecotourist community in the year 2040. Here, loss is taken up through an inventive form of ethnographic storytelling that brings together people, animals, landscapes, and the weather in a world beyond the climate crisis right now where new entanglements with things which have fallen to ruin emerge in imagined milieus in which loss and life converge.



Trade Review

“Beautifully written and astonishingly sharp in its attunement to the tell-tale signs in small affecting moments, the book is in good company with a strong and rapidly growing corpus of books refashioning anthropological research and writing to more adequately approach the complexity and intensity of current global forces.” • Kathleen C. Stewart, University of Texas at Austin



Table of Contents

List of Figures
Preface
Acknowledgements

Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10

Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18

References
Index

The Feeling of the Fall: An Ethnographic Writing

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    A Hardback by Ines Taccone

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      View other formats and editions of The Feeling of the Fall: An Ethnographic Writing by Ines Taccone

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 11/08/2023
      ISBN13: 9781805390343, 978-1805390343
      ISBN10: 1805390341

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      As an inquiry into engagements with forces of loss and threat, this work explores experimental ways to write about climate crisis in anthropology. From Belize to Ontario and back, this ambitious piece of ethnographic writing set during a time “beyond ruin” in a fictional, ecotourist community in the year 2040. Here, loss is taken up through an inventive form of ethnographic storytelling that brings together people, animals, landscapes, and the weather in a world beyond the climate crisis right now where new entanglements with things which have fallen to ruin emerge in imagined milieus in which loss and life converge.



      Trade Review

      “Beautifully written and astonishingly sharp in its attunement to the tell-tale signs in small affecting moments, the book is in good company with a strong and rapidly growing corpus of books refashioning anthropological research and writing to more adequately approach the complexity and intensity of current global forces.” • Kathleen C. Stewart, University of Texas at Austin



      Table of Contents

      List of Figures
      Preface
      Acknowledgements

      Chapter 1
      Chapter 2
      Chapter 3
      Chapter 4
      Chapter 5
      Chapter 6
      Chapter 7
      Chapter 8
      Chapter 9
      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11
      Chapter 12
      Chapter 13
      Chapter 14
      Chapter 15
      Chapter 16
      Chapter 17
      Chapter 18

      References
      Index

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