The Plot is on Fire
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Beschrijving
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A guide to building caring communities in a world on fire ‘A guerrilla handbook indispensable in these times’ Stefano Harney, Professor, Academy of Media Arts Cologne, co-author of All Incomplete ‘This book asks the right questions at the right moment in the history of modern agriculture and land struggles. It will nourish the heart and mind’ Stefania Barca, author of Workers of the Earth ‘In times of ongoing ecocide and genocide, this combative manifesto offers a unique analysis’ Nadine Gerner and Lina Hansen, authors of Ökofeminismus As myths of progress and modernization collapse in the relentless polycrisis of our time, how do we strengthen alternative visions of how to move forward – in community, practice and struggle? How do we come together as movements to care for the earth and each other? Focusing on agriculture, this book looks at peasant, indigenous, and transecofeminist practices, and puts forward an alternative conception of how we can sustain life collectively – beyond progress, plantation and patriarchy. Recovering and repurposing technologies, and breaking down the division between rural and urban, the ground is made fertile for growing other futures. Alongside writers like Ursula Le Guin and Octavia Butler, this work of radical political theory raises critical questions about technology and storytelling as matters of care and community. Manuela Zechner is a researcher, educator and organizer. She co-founded the Common Ecologies school, produces the Earthcare Fieldcast and is affiliated with the Centre for Applied Ecological Thinking at Copenhagen University. As myths of progress and modernisation collapse in the relentless polycrisis of our time, how do we strengthen other plots—in community, practice and struggle? How do we come together as movements for earthcare? This book weaves stories, proposals, and analyses around a key domain of living reproduction in crisis: agriculture. Looking at peasant, indigenous, and transecofeminist practices, it formulates another plot on how we want to sustain life collectively—beyond progress, plantation, and patriarchy. Recovering and repurposing old and new technologies, and breaking down the division between rural and urban, the ground is made fertile for growing other futures. Alongside writers like Ursula Le Guin and Octavia Butler, this work of radical political theory raises critical questions about technology and storytelling, as matters of care and community.
A guide to building caring communities in a world on fire ‘A guerrilla handbook indispensable in these times’ Stefano Harney, Professor, Academy of Media Arts Cologne, co-author of All Incomplete ‘This book asks the right questions at the right moment in the history of modern agriculture and land struggles. It will nourish the heart and mind’ Stefania Barca, author of Workers of the Earth ‘In times of ongoing ecocide and genocide, this combative manifesto offers a unique analysis’ Nadine Gerner and Lina Hansen, authors of Ökofeminismus As myths of progress and modernization collapse in the relentless polycrisis of our time, how do we strengthen alternative visions of how to move forward – in community, practice and struggle? How do we come together as movements to care for the earth and each other? Focusing on agriculture, this book looks at peasant, indigenous, and transecofeminist practices, and puts forward an alternative conception of how we can sustain life collectively – beyond progress, plantation and patriarchy. Recovering and repurposing technologies, and breaking down the division between rural and urban, the ground is made fertile for growing other futures. Alongside writers like Ursula Le Guin and Octavia Butler, this work of radical political theory raises critical questions about technology and storytelling as matters of care and community. Manuela Zechner is a researcher, educator and organizer. She co-founded the Common Ecologies school, produces the Earthcare Fieldcast and is affiliated with the Centre for Applied Ecological Thinking at Copenhagen University. As myths of progress and modernisation collapse in the relentless polycrisis of our time, how do we strengthen other plots—in community, practice and struggle? How do we come together as movements for earthcare? This book weaves stories, proposals, and analyses around a key domain of living reproduction in crisis: agriculture. Looking at peasant, indigenous, and transecofeminist practices, it formulates another plot on how we want to sustain life collectively—beyond progress, plantation, and patriarchy. Recovering and repurposing old and new technologies, and breaking down the division between rural and urban, the ground is made fertile for growing other futures. Alongside writers like Ursula Le Guin and Octavia Butler, this work of radical political theory raises critical questions about technology and storytelling, as matters of care and community.
AmazonPages: 304, Paperback, Pluto Press (UK)