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Tragedies of the Capitalocene

Journal of Contemporary Drama in English, 2020
AbstractThe idea of the “Anthropocene” is rapidly gaining currency as an ecocritical lens through which to view theater and performance. But as a lens for critical analysis, the concept of the “Anthropocene” is problematic, primarily because it fails to differentiate among humans, many of whom are in conflict precisely because the benefits and costs of
Wendy Arons
exaly   +2 more sources

Capitalocene

2021
Capitalocene
Nicola Capone   +5 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Paulo Freire and a Curriculum for the Capitalocene

2020
The teaching of utopian dreaming in a classroom setting can be made relevant to the current situation facing humanity through a confrontation with what Jason W. Moore calls the “Capitalocene.” With the “Capitalocene,” the inhabitants of the capitalist system confront their place in natural history, within an era in which capitalism ultimately ...
Samuel Day Fassbinder
exaly   +2 more sources

Racial Capitalocene Binaries

2021
Interdisciplinary doctoral researcher Sasha Shestakova examines the intersections of climate change, extractivist capitalism and the destruction of indigenous cultures. Drawing on Françoise Vergès’ concept of the racial capitalocene, they trace the consequences of an oil spill and other environmental damage in Russia’s Far North on the lifeworlds of ...
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The Capitalocene response to the Anthropocene

2021
Farming and eating are both social and natural, connecting soils, water, body, labour power, capital (sometimes), culture, hunger, identity, plants, pests, animals, photosynthesis, agricultural knowledge, science (sometimes), seeds, power and so on.
Jansen, Kees, Jongerden, J.P.
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Beneath the Anthropocene, the Capitalocene

2020
For some years now, the perspective opened up by digital studies, around a new paradigm of knowledge, has been trying to return to the great sharing (Nature/Artefact), as an analysis of the production of human beings and their social institutions through technology, as well as that of the various ways of being of men, generated by the different ...
Cormerais, Franck   +2 more
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The Common, Force, and the Capitalocene

the minnesota review, 2019
Different as they are, Fredric Jameson’s “universal army” and Bruno Latour’s “Theater of Negotiations” both implicitly address the failure of a sufficiently large self-organized “common force” (à la Leslie Marmon Silko) to arise and repair capitalogenic ecological and social depredations today.
openaire   +1 more source

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