The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit

In humanities disciplines, ever more metaphorical ink is being spilled on conceptualizing the Anthropocene. Given the numerous articles, books, and edited volumes (this one included) theorizing and retheorizing the Anthropocene, it’s little wonder that there is no agreement about precisely what it i...

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Main Author: Barton, Jeni
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/analecta/article/view/2060
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spelling ftmemunijournals:oai:ojs.journals.library.mun.ca:article/2060 2023-05-15T17:51:35+02:00 The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit Barton, Jeni 2019-01-07 application/pdf https://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/analecta/article/view/2060 eng eng Memorial University of Newfoundland https://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/analecta/article/view/2060/1650 https://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/analecta/article/view/2060 Analecta Hermeneutica; Vol 10 (2018): The Anthropocene. Edited by Jeni Barton and Jay Foster 1918-7351 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2019 ftmemunijournals 2021-05-09T13:32:41Z In humanities disciplines, ever more metaphorical ink is being spilled on conceptualizing the Anthropocene. Given the numerous articles, books, and edited volumes (this one included) theorizing and retheorizing the Anthropocene, it’s little wonder that there is no agreement about precisely what it is or what it means. There is no single Anthropocene narrative to be told. Rather, there are, as scholars have noted, a plurality of Anthropocenes. There are a plurality of interpretations of the Anthropocene concept and an abundance of proposed uses for it. Among the various narratives, differences often lie in who or what is blamed (humanity; capitalism; fossil fuels), when it began (the Neolithic Revolution; the Industrial Revolution; the post-WWII “Great Acceleration”), and what is to be done (alter human activities to reduce the negative effects; embrace and expand the human potential to better manage and control the planet). A common thread running through the many disparate Anthropocene stories is the very general point that at least some human activities have effects on the planet that are both large-scale and deleterious. The list of offending human activities is probably familiar: greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning, altering of land-cover, fertilizer runoff, overfishing, garbage production, natural resource extraction, to name just a few. The undesirable effects include climate change, ocean acidification, sea level rise, lack of potable water, eutrophication, acid rain, ozone depletion, biodiversity loss, the Great Pacific garbage patch, and rivers that catch on fire. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification Memorial University of Newfoundland: Electronic Journals Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Memorial University of Newfoundland: Electronic Journals
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language English
description In humanities disciplines, ever more metaphorical ink is being spilled on conceptualizing the Anthropocene. Given the numerous articles, books, and edited volumes (this one included) theorizing and retheorizing the Anthropocene, it’s little wonder that there is no agreement about precisely what it is or what it means. There is no single Anthropocene narrative to be told. Rather, there are, as scholars have noted, a plurality of Anthropocenes. There are a plurality of interpretations of the Anthropocene concept and an abundance of proposed uses for it. Among the various narratives, differences often lie in who or what is blamed (humanity; capitalism; fossil fuels), when it began (the Neolithic Revolution; the Industrial Revolution; the post-WWII “Great Acceleration”), and what is to be done (alter human activities to reduce the negative effects; embrace and expand the human potential to better manage and control the planet). A common thread running through the many disparate Anthropocene stories is the very general point that at least some human activities have effects on the planet that are both large-scale and deleterious. The list of offending human activities is probably familiar: greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning, altering of land-cover, fertilizer runoff, overfishing, garbage production, natural resource extraction, to name just a few. The undesirable effects include climate change, ocean acidification, sea level rise, lack of potable water, eutrophication, acid rain, ozone depletion, biodiversity loss, the Great Pacific garbage patch, and rivers that catch on fire.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Barton, Jeni
spellingShingle Barton, Jeni
The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit
author_facet Barton, Jeni
author_sort Barton, Jeni
title The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit
title_short The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit
title_full The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit
title_fullStr The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit
title_full_unstemmed The Geo-Politics of the Anthropocene: Using Stratigraphy to Naturalize the Anthropocene as a Formal Geological Unit
title_sort geo-politics of the anthropocene: using stratigraphy to naturalize the anthropocene as a formal geological unit
publisher Memorial University of Newfoundland
publishDate 2019
url https://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/analecta/article/view/2060
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Analecta Hermeneutica; Vol 10 (2018): The Anthropocene. Edited by Jeni Barton and Jay Foster
1918-7351
op_relation https://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/analecta/article/view/2060/1650
https://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/analecta/article/view/2060
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