by Fernando Vidal (Editor), Fernando Vidal (Editor), Nélia Dias (Editor)
The notion of Endangerment stands at the heart of a network of concepts, values and practices dealing with objects and beings considered threatened by extinction, and with the procedures aimed at preserving them. Usually animated by a sense of urgency and citizenship, identifying endangered entities involves evaluating an impending threat and opens the way for preservation strategies.
Endangerment, Biodiversity and Culture looks at some of the fundamental ways in which this process involves science, but also more than science: not only data and knowledge and institutions, but also affects and values. Focusing on an endangerment sensibility, it encapsulates tensions between the normative and the utilitarian, the natural and the cultural. The chapters situate that specifically modern sensibility in historical perspective, and examine central aspects of its recent and present forms.
This timely volume offers the most cutting-edge insights into the Environmental Humanities for researchers working in Environmental Studies, History, Anthropology, Sociology and Science and Technology Studies.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 264
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 09 Jul 2015
ISBN 10: 1138847410
ISBN 13: 9781138847415
There are thousands of endangered species and hundreds of human cultures facing extinction along with the languages they have spoken. This fascinating book takes the reader along to delve into the reasons we are losing diversity and the many kinds of knowledge it could give us. How has politics made endangerment worse, or tried to prevent it? The wise authors of these chapters find examples from around the world and look at ways to preserve and revive what we might otherwise lose. This book raises interesting questions and is a dependable key to understanding. -J. Donald Hughes, University of Denver, USA
In this era of rapidly accelerating climate change, species extinction, and cultural vulnerability, endangerment has come to shape the science, politics, and emotions mobilized to archive and defend the fatally condemned. Endangerment, Biodiversity, and Culture is a timely volume that makes visible the undercurrent of loss animating work across the human and life sciences. -Gregg Mitman, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Fernando Vidal and Nelia Dias discuss, from the perspective of social anthropology and sciences studies, the notion of intrinsic value, which is highly debated in environmental humanities. They show that values emerge out of contested encounters between different relations to the environment, expressed through emotions and engagements. - Somatosphere, Frederic Keck, Laboratoire d'anthropologie sociale and head of the research department of the musee du quai Branly
Scholars will do well to consider the concept of the endangerment sensi-bility, as well as Endangerment, Biodiversity, and Culture, as they examine their own approaches to endangered species, cultural politics and the history of science. - Kevin C. Brown, University of California, Santa Barbara Environment and History, September 2017