Description

Book Synopsis

Bringing the word sustainability back from the brink of cliché—to a substantive, truly sustainable future

Is sustainability a hopelessly vague word, with meager purpose aside from a feel-good appeal to the consumer? In The Three Sustainabilities, Allan Stoekl seeks to (re)valorize the word, for a simple reason: it is useful. Sustainability designates objects in time, their birth or genesis, their consistency, their survival, their demise. And it raises the question, as no other word does, of the role of humans in the survival of a world that is quickly disappearing—and perhaps in the genesis of another world.

Stoekl considers a range of possibilities for the word, touching upon questions of object ontology, psychoanalysis, urban critique, technocracy, and religion. He argues that there are three varieties of sustainability, seen from philosophical, cultural, and economic perspectives. One involves the self-sustaining world “without us”; another, the world under our control, which can run the political spectrum from corporatism to Marxism to the Green New Deal; and a third that carries a social and communitarian charge, an energy of the “universe” affirmed through, among other things, meditation and gifting. Each of these carves out a different space in the relations between objects, humans, and their survival and degradation. Each is necessary, unavoidable, and intimately bound with, and infinitely distant from, the others.

Along the way, Stoekl cites a wide range of authors, from philosophers to social thinkers, literary theorists to criminologists, anthropologists to novelists. This beautifully written, compelling, and nuanced book is a must for anyone interested in questions of ecology, energy, the environmental humanities, contemporary theories of the object, postmodern and posthuman aesthetics, or religion and the sacred in relation to community.



Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction

First Order. Base Sustainability

1. Objects, Energy, the Chora

2. Animals, Scale, Death

3. Statues, Language, Machines

Second Order. Restricted Sustainability

4. Technocracy, Energy Economics, Utopia

5. Solar Architecture, Sadism, Heterogeneity

6. Anamorphoses of the Future

Third Order. General Sustainability

7. Sustainability’s Return

8. Marxism, Meditation, Consumption

9. The Dead, the Future: Scrounging and Gifting the Ruins

Acknowledgments

Notes

Bibliography

Index

The Three Sustainabilities: Energy, Economy, Time

    Product form

    £20.69

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £22.99 – you save £2.30 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 30 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Allan Stoekl

    15 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of The Three Sustainabilities: Energy, Economy, Time by Allan Stoekl

      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 28/09/2021
      ISBN13: 9781517908188, 978-1517908188
      ISBN10: 1517908183

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Bringing the word sustainability back from the brink of cliché—to a substantive, truly sustainable future

      Is sustainability a hopelessly vague word, with meager purpose aside from a feel-good appeal to the consumer? In The Three Sustainabilities, Allan Stoekl seeks to (re)valorize the word, for a simple reason: it is useful. Sustainability designates objects in time, their birth or genesis, their consistency, their survival, their demise. And it raises the question, as no other word does, of the role of humans in the survival of a world that is quickly disappearing—and perhaps in the genesis of another world.

      Stoekl considers a range of possibilities for the word, touching upon questions of object ontology, psychoanalysis, urban critique, technocracy, and religion. He argues that there are three varieties of sustainability, seen from philosophical, cultural, and economic perspectives. One involves the self-sustaining world “without us”; another, the world under our control, which can run the political spectrum from corporatism to Marxism to the Green New Deal; and a third that carries a social and communitarian charge, an energy of the “universe” affirmed through, among other things, meditation and gifting. Each of these carves out a different space in the relations between objects, humans, and their survival and degradation. Each is necessary, unavoidable, and intimately bound with, and infinitely distant from, the others.

      Along the way, Stoekl cites a wide range of authors, from philosophers to social thinkers, literary theorists to criminologists, anthropologists to novelists. This beautifully written, compelling, and nuanced book is a must for anyone interested in questions of ecology, energy, the environmental humanities, contemporary theories of the object, postmodern and posthuman aesthetics, or religion and the sacred in relation to community.



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Introduction

      First Order. Base Sustainability

      1. Objects, Energy, the Chora

      2. Animals, Scale, Death

      3. Statues, Language, Machines

      Second Order. Restricted Sustainability

      4. Technocracy, Energy Economics, Utopia

      5. Solar Architecture, Sadism, Heterogeneity

      6. Anamorphoses of the Future

      Third Order. General Sustainability

      7. Sustainability’s Return

      8. Marxism, Meditation, Consumption

      9. The Dead, the Future: Scrounging and Gifting the Ruins

      Acknowledgments

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account