How nature works : rethinking labor on a troubled planet /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, [2019]
Description:x, 261 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11948901
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Besky, Sarah, 1981- editor.
Blanchette, Alex, editor.
ISBN:9780826360854
0826360858
9780826360861 (ebook)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 225-246) and index.
Other form:Online version: How nature works. Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, [2019] 9780826360861
Description
Summary:

Winner of the 2021 Society for the Anthropology of Work (SAW) Book Prize



We now live on a planet that is troubled--even overworked--in ways that compel us to reckon with inherited common sense about the relationship between human labor and nonhuman nature. In Paraguay, fast-growing soy plants are displacing both prior crops and people. In Malaysia, dispossessed farmers are training captive orangutans to earn their own meals. In India, a prized dairy cow suddenly refuses to give more milk. Built from these sorts of scenes and sites, where the ultimate subjects and agents of work are ambiguous, How Nature Works develops an anthropology of labor that is sharply attuned to the irreversible effects of climate change, extinction, and deforestation. The authors of this volume push ethnographic inquiry beyond the anthropocentric documentation of human work on nature in order to develop a language for thinking about how all labor is a collective ecological act.

Physical Description:x, 261 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 225-246) and index.
ISBN:9780826360854
0826360858
9780826360861 (ebook)