In Animate Planet Kath Weston shows how new intimacies between humans, animals, and their surroundings are emerging as people attempt to understand how the high-tech ecologically damaged world they have made is remaking them, one synthetic chemical, radioactive isotope, and megastorm at a time. Visceral sensations, she finds, are vital to this process, which yields a new animism in which humans and "the environment" become thoroughly entangled. In case studies on food, water, energy, and climate from the United States, India, and Japan, Weston approaches the new animism as both a symptom of our times and an analytic with the potential to open paths to new and forgotten ways of living.
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgments: Generosity and Nothing But
- Introduction: Animating Intimacies, Reanimating a World
- Food
- 1. Biosecurity and Surveillance in the Food Chain
- Energy
- 2. The Unwanted Intimacy of Radiation Exposure in Japan
- Climate Change
- 3. Climate Change, Slippery on the Skin
- Water
- 4. The Greatest Show on Parched Earth
- Knowing What we Know, Why are we Stuck?
- 5. Political Ecologies of the Precarious
- Notes
- References
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- X
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