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[Commlist] new book: Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity
Wed Jul 08 09:03:40 GMT 2020
The /Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity/
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Ecocultural-Identity-1st-Edition/Milstein-Castro-Sotomayor/p/book/9781138478411> (2020)
is a timely book, as across the globe more and more of us awake to our
always interconnected selves. The /Handbook/ brings the ecological turn
to sociocultural understandings of self and group identities,
introducing an interdisciplinary, insightful assembly of original theory
and research on planetary positionalities in flux in the Anthropocene –
or what in this /Handbook/ cultural ecologist David Abram presciently
renames the Humilocene, a new “epoch of humility.” Forty international
authors craft a kaleidoscopic lens, focusing on ways all identities are
ecocultural and on the multiple and unspooling ways identities evolve
and transform and, in so doing, may support reciprocal surviving and
thriving.
Introduction chapter and endorsements are below. Table of Contents,
editor bios, and authors can be found at this Routledge link
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Ecocultural-Identity-1st-Edition/Milstein-Castro-Sotomayor/p/book/9781138478411>.
Please help share this among your networks. And please ask your
libraries to purchase the book (or put it on their to-buy lists if their
budgets have been temporarily frozen) -- The Handbook is an important
resource for our times for scholars, teachers, students, protectors,
policy-makers, and practitioners. Routledge has provided a 20% discount
code: FLR40. The editors are available for Q&A, interviews, guest
commentary, talks, etc. An online book launch is likely forthcoming —
we’ll keep you posted :)!
*/What has been said about the Handbook:/*
*“Intricately transdisciplinary and cross-geographical, it is
the first volume of its kind to caringly craft a gathering
concept, that of ecocultural identities, bringing together the
social, political, and ecological dimensions of identity. What
results is a treasure of insights on the politics of life,
broadly speaking, and a novel toolbox for tackling effectively
the damages caused by modern capitalist modes of extraction
and the urgent task of Earth’s ontological repair and renewal.”*
*Arturo Escobar, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill*
**
*“Too often mislabelled an ‘issue,’ the environment is in fact
integral not just to everything we do but to who we are. This
link between our identity and our ecology has long been
recognised in many societies, but others seem to have
forgotten its signal importance. This superb collection shows
why all identities are ecocultural ones, and why full
recognition of this is essential to all our political futures.” *
*Noel Castree, University of Manchester*
* “A smart, provocative, and original collection, the Handbook
of Ecocultural Identity provides a definitive introduction to
the constraints upon, and the contexts, formations, and
impacts of, our diverse – but often unexamined – ecological
selves.” *
*Robert Cox, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and
three-time national president of the Sierra Club*
*“I am in complete solidarity with this book.” *
*Donna Haraway, University of California, Santa Cruz*
*
*/Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity/
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Ecocultural-Identity-1st-Edition/Milstein-Castro-Sotomayor/p/book/9781138478411>* Introduction:
*
"We humans are cultural and ecological beings. This doesn’t make
us unique as a species – myriad other beings, from orcas to elephants,
are cultural and ecological, too. Yet, perhaps for an increasing
majority of us humans, it seems as if our ecological selves have
become steadily less accessible. The lack of earthly self-awareness in
an increasingly human-centered world is reflected in the invisibility
and deniability we assign to our environmental interlinkages, impacts,
and interdependencies. And this lack of wakefulness is reified in
the largely unabated extractive and destructive orientation that
powerful interests and the majority of governments maintain toward
the planet.
The absence of ecological palpability also has been evident in much
social activism, which often has emphasized sociocultural identity
formations, such as race, gender, sexuality, and class, yet largely
disregarded interrelated more-than-human dimensions (environmental
justice movements being among the clear exceptions). Equally
in scholarship, research overwhelmingly has articulated identity as
shaping, and being shaped by, human society but rarely as shaping,
and being shaped by, the more-than-human world (Dervin & Risager, 2017;
Gupta & Ferguson, 1992; Nakayama & Halualani, 2010). Indeed, identity,
representation, difference, contingency, and power can be understood as
‘pre-ecological’ concepts (Jagtenberg & McKie, 1997, p.
121), notions emerging from societies and scholarships that
predominantly have ignored or denigrated extra-human relations,
knowledges, and practices.
As important as extant identity scholarship and activism have been
to understanding and improving aspects of the human condition,
cultural commentators such as Akanbi (2019) have begun to explore how
clinging too hard to sociocultural dimensions of one’s
identity ‘can shutdown conversation,’ make social movements ‘hollow and
full of holes,’ and block compassion, empathy, understanding, nuance,
interconnectedness, and common recognition. This clinging is part of a
cultural condition Haraway (1991) pinpoints as a long-defined ‘proper
state for a Western person’ that centers an urge ‘to have and hold
a core identity as if it were a possession’ (p. 135). Such ‘ownership of
the self’ (p. 135), however, conflicts with actual social and
ecological interlinkages of selves, which interweave unavoidable, often
invisible commonalities and evade hubristic attempts at possession.
Indeed, all of us, each and every one, are always participants
in crisscrossing sociocultural and ecological webs of life,
whether consciously or not. It is the growing majority of humanity’s
obliviousness – and even active denial – of
our interrelated sociocultural and ecological constitutions and
conditions that has us where we are today, in the midst of unfolding
anthropogenic biospheric catastrophe. This is the context for the
/Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity/
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Ecocultural-Identity-1st-Edition/Milstein-Castro-Sotomayor/p/book/9781138478411>/./
This Handbook brings together diverse voices from around the globe to
illuminate dynamics and forms of ecocultural identity so we can better
understand – and better relate and respond to – the intertwining of
disrupted ecosystems and our day-to-day and long-term mutual existences.
The chapters within account for a plurality of subjectivities in flux
and formation in the Anthropocene (Crutzen & Stoermer, 2000),
Capitalocene (Moore, 2015), Chthulucene (Haraway, 2016), or what Abram
(2020) in this Handbook presciently introduces as the Humilocene, a
grounded-human epoch steeped in both humiliation and humility. In order
to intervene in the ontological, political, and institutional flows that
configure this many-named epoch of human-surpassed
earthly boundaries (Alexiades, 2018), the Handbook authors reinterrogate
what it means to be human and reimagine the many ways we identify that
are of essence to whether we can think and cultivate our ways into
inhabitable futures.
The Handbook’s assembly of original theory and research provides views
into ways sociocultural and ecological identities not only are entwined
but also mutually constituted. Our intention is to help foster a radical
multi-lensed epistemology focused on ways ecocultural selfhood is being,
and could be, understood, felt, performed, and practiced. As such, this
Handbook has three core transdisciplinary goals: first, to provide a
prismatic introduction to the emergent concept and framework of
ecocultural identity for researchers, instructors, students, activists,
and practitioners; second, to provide a catalytic resource for
examining, critiquing, and activating ecocultural identities as
they manifest in everyday lives and in structural processes; and, third,
as the Handbook illuminates the depth, breadth, and common threads of
a diverse budding body of knowledge and expertise, this collection aims
to ignite increased interest in academic and public realms and to expand
dialogues regarding the planetary positionalities at the heart of our
most actively destructive and robustly thriving presents and futures.
What is ecocultural identity?
As identity has become an increasingly central concept across the public
sphere, scholarship has examined ways ‘the lived experience of
identities is always implicated in processes of transformation’ (Elliot,
2020b, p. 12). Narrations and navigations of identity intersect with
politics, society, and processes of reinvention, reconstruction, and
renewal. Antiessentialist understandings of identity emphasize ways
identities never emerge from an already present unchanging
core, but rather within contexts and relationalities, making identities
‘continually and differently constituted’ (Escobar, 1999, p. 3) often
partly in milieus of power. What largely has been missing across
disciplines and in the public domain, however, is a dedication to
understanding identity ecologically in tandem with cultural and social
modes of consideration. An ecocultural identity framework troubles this
tendency to conceive of the environmental as separate from or
a subsidiary of the economic, political, historical, and cultural,
and instead situates group and individual ecological affiliations and
practices as inextricable from – and mutually constituted with
– sociocultural dimensions.
As Abram states in this Handbook, ‘we don’t have a hoot of a chance of
healing our social justice issues until we begin including the
more-than-human world within our sense of the socius, or the community’
(Abram with Milstein & Castro-Sotomayor, 2020, p. 24) The large-scale
erasure of our species’ perception of our nestedness within
ecological communities, Abram argues, also renders our
human relationships – from the intimate to the international –
remarkably brittle. As Earth floods, quakes, and melts, and as extremist
rhetoric intoxicates much of the political arena, an ecocultural
perspective on identity offers an expanded, potentially recuperative
lens for understanding self, others, and existence as intrinsically
relational and broadly ethical.
This Handbook introduces a new term: ecocultural identity. As such, we
want to make clear from the start what this term means and what it does
not mean. The notion of ecocultural identity offers an overarching
framework for understanding all identities. In other words, ecocultural
identity is not a normative concept – for instance, chapters in this
Handbook are not limited to environmentalist identities, which much
previous work has focused on (e.g., Chianchi, 2015),
nor ecocentric identities (e.g., Clayton & Opotow, 2003; Horton, 2003;
Thomashow, 1995), another area of well-developed research. Rather, an
ecocultural identity lens serves to widen the scope on all identities
to understand ways sociocultural dimensions of selfhoods are always
inseparable from ecological dimensions.
The ecological turn in this conceptualization of identity hinges upon
the assumption that all identities have earthly constitutions and forces
– whether those identities are destructive or protective, complacent or
creative, extractive or restorative. In illuminating ecological
dimensions of identity, the importance of culture also cannot be
overlooked as identities are always materially and discursively
constructed. We are made of, part of, emerging from, and constantly
contributing to both ecology and culture – producing, performing, and
constantly perceiving and enacting through the both. In
these ways, one’s ecocultural identity – whether latent or conscious –
is at the heart of the positionalities, subjectivities, and practices
that (in)form one’s emotional, embodied, mental, and political
sensibilities in and with the all-encompassing world.
The lens of ecocultural identity is boundary-crossing in a number of
respects – traversing across different fields of thought as well as
surmounting culturally constructed borders separating human, flora,
fauna, and environment. As such, the study of ecocultural identity has
the potential to illuminate the complex and thickly storied self as
vitally entangled within the stories of other species and the Earth
itself. Such ecocultural inquiry expands notions of intersectionality
to include not only sociocultural categories but also oft overlooked
more-than-human groupings, including but certainly not limited to those
of mammals, oxygen-carbon dioxide exchangers, land-dwellers, bodies
of water, and biomes. This more-than-human intersectionality can lead
to acknowledgements of enduring intraspecies, interspecies, and
elemental commonalities and to shared questions, concerns, and actions
regarding our collective course of living (Nicholas Jacobson, personal
communication).
Scholarly explorations of cultural and ecological identification as
mutually constituted have been steadily growing (Armstrong, 1995;
Carbaugh, 1996; Elliot, 2020a; Gómez-Barris, 2017; Grusin, 2015; Hodden,
2014; Jagtenberg & McKie, 1997; Junka-Aikio & Cortes-Severino,
2017; Mendoza & Kinefuchi, 2016; Milstein, 2012b; Milstein, Thomas,
& Hoffmann, 2019; Mortimer-Sandilands & Erickson, 2010; Weiss & Haber,
1999). These developments of renewed understandings of an extended self,
at once indivisibly ecological and cultural, unshackle predominant
notions of human subjectivity, senses of selfhood, and worldly
experience, and have liberatory potential. As Grusin (2015) states,
"To extend our academic and critical concern to include nonhuman animals
and the nonhuman environment, which had previously been excluded or
ignored from critical or scholarly humanistic concern, should be a
politically liberatory project in very much the same way that earlier,
similar turns toward a concern of gender, race, ethnicity, or class were
politically liberatory for groups of humans." (p. xix)
In these ways, as part of a new social grammar (Santos, 2011), an
ecocultural lens can contribute both to problematizing and redefining
conventional concepts of self amidst a crisis of group and individual
identity marked not only by a fierce fixity of identity labels but also
by a pernicious anthropocentrism that fixes humanity at the center of
existence. While inquiries into sociocultural identity can productively
focus on linking related oppressions that disparate groups experience
in order to build up coalitions that actively change society, a notion
of identity that additionally embraces the intrinsic ecology
of existence aims at coming to terms, too, with the roles
our oppressions and liberations play in our common extinctions or
continuances in one form or another. The move to expand views of
identification to always include who we are relationally
as ecological bodies and environmental forces and reactants is also a
move to address dominant feelings of disconnection and polarization
that underlie both environmental and sociocultural struggles, and to
form new insights that open alternative public spheres and counter
patriarchal, imperialist, capitalist, and extractivist systems of
modernity that rapidly have (trans)formed our shared milieu (Junka-Aikio
& Cortes-Severino, 2017).
Movements, such as Indigenous-led protector uprisings, Extinction
Rebellion, and the child-led School Strike for Climate, are examples of
ways ecocultural perspectives contribute to fostering and delineating a
radical democracy that, in Sandilands words, ‘is an ecological
necessity, one which necessarily includes a variety of struggles
in transcendence of fundamentally limiting notions of the subject’ (as
quoted in Code, 2006, p. 20). An ecocultural identity lens assists us
in remembering we are ‘earth citizens,’ which can ‘help us recover our
common humanity and help us transcend the deep division of
intolerance, hate, and fear that corporate globalization’s
ruptures, polarization, and enclosures have created’ (Shiva, 2015, p. 6).
Transdisciplinary and international scope
Today’s problems and opportunities require holistic and kaleidoscopic
conversations. As such, the /Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity/
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Ecocultural-Identity-1st-Edition/Milstein-Castro-Sotomayor/p/book/9781138478411> provides
far-reaching original transdisciplinary international research on the
role of ecocultural identity in processes of local and
global disturbance and renewal. Such scholarly inquiries commonly
are dispersed among separate disciplinary subfields or discrete
interdisciplinary schools of thought with relatively small numbers of
adherents – and tend largely to be limited to culturally Western
regions. In an attempt to broaden and interconnect the conversation, the
Handbook’s authors speak from a wide variety of disciplinary
and multi-disciplinary backgrounds, including geography,
communication, environmental studies, anthropology, education, planning,
agricultural sciences, linguistics, history, sociology, arts,
cultural studies, and philosophy. The Handbook authors hail from
North and South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania, and employ
an interlinking array of methodologies and a diversity of orientations
integral to ecocultural work’s vital transdisciplinarity.
The Handbook’s resulting collection of original theory and research
provides an essential reference on ways individual and collective
ecocultural identities endure, emerge, and transform responsively
with/in today’s disrupted world. At the scale of identity, the Handbook
chapters examine the reasons, ramifications, and possible resolutions
for anthropogenic environmental problems. Chapter authors develop and
apply an ecocultural lens to theory building and case studies to
illustrate and nuance sociocultural and ecological tensions within and
among a wide range of identities – including but not limited to Indian
Hindu river protectors, U.S.
Evangelical Christian environmentalists, Ghanaian illegal miners,
Swedish pastoral farmers, Thai canal dwellers, and American West
ranchers. The research within engages broad spectrums of
cultural, spatial, temporal, and environmental contexts – such as polar
imaginings, nation-state borderlands, interspecies mobilities,
childhood educations, Indigenous–settler intersections, forestry
relations, fossil fuel industry-induced earthquakes, desert waterscapes,
and ancient and pre-colonial interspecies and political ecological
histories.
Part I of the Handbook, ‘Illuminating and problematizing ecocultural
identity,’ features chapters that both create and examine generative
theory to reveal ways ecocultural identities are produced, felt,
negotiated, constrained, and transformed in everyday, historical, and
institutional contexts. Part II, ‘Forming and fostering ecocultural
identity,’ comprises chapters that examine specific cultivations and
forces of identity that further ways of being in the world, and
investigate how these intersect with class, race, gender, religion, and
the colonial present within historical, political, environmental,
spatial, interpersonal, and multispecies contexts. In Part III,
‘Mediating ecocultural identity,’ chapters highlight media and
technology contexts and consequences for ecocultural identity and the
significance of public sphere representations in reflecting and
shaping both ecocultural identifications and relations. Chapters in Part
IV, ‘Politicizing ecocultural identity,’ examine the
hybridities, inclusions, and exclusions that circulate within
and transform identities in praxis and politics, and ascertain barriers
and opportunities for more radically inclusive and restorative
democratic systems. The fifth and final part, ‘Transforming
ecocultural identity,’ features chapters illustrating the interpretive
power of an ecocultural approach to demonstrate and
inform transformation in ways often overlooked or undermined by
exclusively sociocultural or exclusively environmental orientations.
A note on terminology
In creating the Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity, in our
dialogue together as editors and with chapter contributors, we
encouraged reflexive engagement with ways the very language we use can
function to both constrain and cultivate ecocultural vernaculars and
ways of knowing. We also worked collaboratively with chapter authors
to have the diverse and evolving original research and theory-building
of this Handbook be accessible to an equally diverse and
evolving readership.
Where possible, unnecessary discipline-specific or field-specific jargon
has been avoided and essential terms that may not have the same
centrality of meaning across disciplines or in the public sphere have
been clearly defined. Further, we challenged all contributors to avoid
unreflexive use of common terms such as ‘nature,’ ‘environment,’ and
‘animals’ – terms that in the context of dominant discourses often
function to reproduce notions of a separate, homogeneous,
and backgrounded ecological other. Instead, we asked contributors to
trouble the tendency to frame the ecological or the animal as
separate from or subordinate to the human and to attempt to revive
the ecocultural power of language to evoke earthly immersion and
relation. The Handbook also attempts to avoid unreflexively reproducing
politically strategic terms that have become central to popular speech,
such as ‘climate change’ (introduced by a U.S. Republican think tank to
replace the term ‘global warming’ in order to lessen public concern)
(see Luntz Research Companies, 2002). Instead, the chapters
favor explanatory terms such as climate ‘disruption,’ ‘crisis,’
or ‘emergency’ to indicate human agency and biological urgency.
In understanding ecocultural identity as often shaped by powerful vested
economic and political interests, we also tried to remain reflexive
about the potentialities and difficulties of directly engaging with and
introducing an expanded ecocultural scope in the purviews of
long-established, long-anthropocentric academic disciplines most of us
Handbook contributors were trained in as researchers. The ecocultural
lens itself serves to engage a struggle over meaning and can be seen in
reflexive symbolic moves and intentions of scholars such as Haraway
(2008) in her use of the integrative term ‘naturecultures.’ In this
Handbook, in part by engaging such ecocultural neologisms and concepts
as the more-than-human world (Abram, 1996), humanature (Milstein, 2016;
Milstein, 2012a), and humanimal (Mitchell, 2003), we discursively
interlace culture and ecology in scholarship as they are in
life, turning toward ‘lexical reciprocal intertwining’ (Milstein, 2011,
p. 21, note 1) and away from dominant binary constructs that reproduce
an anthropocentric status quo.
The iterative process of working with chapter authors from multiple
disciplines and practioner realms, most of whom have never met in
person, mirrored challenges of and opportunities for doing recuperative
ecocultural work within the public sphere, in daily interactions, and
throughout the institutions that structure our worlds. From the
original call for papers, to review and selection of chapters, and
through several revision stages, as a diverse group of authors we faced
a shortage of established common frames for ecocultural inquiry.
In conversation, however, we experienced ways expansive
and expressive terminologies and frameworks can be engaged, emerge,
and multiply to galvanize the ecocultural issues of our times.
In the /Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity/
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Ecocultural-Identity-1st-Edition/Milstein-Castro-Sotomayor/p/book/9781138478411>,
we have strived to create and provide a shared, collaborative, and
reflexive platform for introducing, connecting, and
expanding conversations about the ecocultural manifestations and
reverberations of identities. We worked closely with contributors
in expressing a multi-voiced language and transdisciplinary orientation
to define and illustrate ecocultural identity as a framework and to
apply it as a fruitful lens to a wide variety of today’s overwhelming
questions. In honoring the significance of both the ecological and
the cultural in the configuration of the self, this Handbook expansively
reclaims the constitutive and responsive dimensions of identity. Our
hope is this expanded ecocultural scope provides a useful lens
through which to clarify who we have been until now and who we would
like to be tomorrow.
*/More of what's been said about the Handbook:/*
“If diversity is a crucial condition for healthy cultural and
ecological affairs, it is also so in*scholarly matters, and
that is what readers will find in this excellent Handbook – a
variety of ways of keeping our social and ecological worlds
mutually articulated, healthily together.”*
*Donal Carbaugh, University of Massachusetts*
**
“Some of the most transformative scholarship occurs when we
don’t simply critique the*limits of existing approaches, but
courageously throw in front of us new conceptual approaches or
orientations, often marked in the first instance by new words.
It is in this vein that the Handbook of Ecocultural Identity
runs, offering up and then beginning to give form, colour, and
texture to the term ‘ecocultural identity’ as a way to think
beyond a range of dichotomies that have constituted and
normalized human exceptionalism and our violent estrangement
from the eco-worlds in which we are embedded. In a spirit of
humility and generosity, the editors do not try to fix this
new term in the net of their own interpretations, but rather
create a rich interdisciplinary and global forum where the
chapter authors are welcomed to articulate their
understandings of what ecocultural identity means, and what
this term might do to how we might think and act. Readers too
are invited to join the conversation in what promises to be a
fertile approach to thinking and acting with appropriate
humility in an era that is crying out for humans to come home
to themselves as ecocultural beings.”*
*Danielle Celermajer, University of Sydney*
**
*“This is a superb compilation of exciting transdisciplinary
theory and research about ecocultural identity, or the
intertwining of culture and ecology in more-than-human and
human beings. This volume demonstrates an impressive diversity
of epistemological, methodological, ontological, and
disciplinary approaches as well as case studies from
throughout the many regions, cultures, and species of the
Earth. The Humilocene, critical ecocultural intersectionality,
sankofa, pacha, and human animal earthlings are just a few of
the fruitful concepts introduced that expand our ability to
see and understand ecocultural identity. The Routledge
Handbook of Ecocultural Identity lays the groundwork for a
radical revisioning of human relations with/in the more-than
human ecological world. It provides needed strategies for
ecological resilience in the midst of the Anthropocene and for
imagining our collective future.” *
*Danielle Endres, University of Utah*
**
*“As we find ourselves faced with the extreme environmental
consequences of the Anthropocene, we need guides to help us
negotiate appropriate ways of living with and understanding
our relationship to the more-than-human world. This Handbook
offers to the field a significant theoretical contribution,
ecocultural identity, providing a practical and necessary
guide for comprehending our inseparable place in the
ecological web of life.” *
*Barb Willard, DePaul University*
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