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Climates and Cultures -

Climates and Cultures

Mike Hulme (Herausgeber)

Media-Kombination
1888 Seiten
2015
SAGE Publications Ltd
978-1-4739-0452-1 (ISBN)
CHF 1.729,95 inkl. MwSt
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‘Climate’ is an old idea, but an idea which retains tremendous power, versatility and utility in today’s world. For the Ancient Greeks, climate worked both as index and as agency , and this dual function has recurred throughout human cultural history and it works too in contemporary discourses about climate change. Climates change physically, but climates can also change ideologically.  What climate means to different people in different places in different eras is not stable. If culture is concerned with how human meaning, symbolism and practice take on substantive and material forms, then studying climate through culture is likely to be a fruitful activity.

 

This Major Work is a valuable synopsis of a diffuse discourse and captures some of the most important writing on climate and culture that has appeared since the 1980s. It provides a structure within which the recently growing body of work in human geography, anthropology, sociology and religious studies can be placed.

 

Volume One:  Theorising Climate and Culture

Volume Two:  The Agencies of Climate

Volume Three:  Reading Climate and Culture in the Past

Volume Four: Reading Climate and Culture in the Future

Volume Five: Climate and Culture in Places

Volume Six: Cultural Representations of Climate

 

Mike Hulme is professor of climate and culture in the Department of Geography at King’s College London.  His work sits at the intersection of climate, history and culture.  He studies how knowledge about climate and its changes is made and represented and analyses the numerous ways in which the idea of climate-change is deployed in public discourse around the world.  His previous books include Can Science Fix Climate Change? A Case Against Climate Engineering (Polity, 2014), Exploring Climate Change Through Science and In Society (Routledge, 2013) and Why We Disagree About Climate Change (Cambridge, 2009).  This latter book was chosen by The Economist magazine as one of its science and technology books of the year.  From 2000 to 2007 he was the Founding Director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, based at the University of East Anglia, and since 2007 has been the founding Editor-in-Chief of the review journal Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews (WIREs) Climate Change. He is currently Head of Department. 

VOLUME ONE: CULTURES OF CLIMATE KNOWLEDGE
The Classification of Climates from Pythagoras to Koeppen - Marie Sanderson
The Definition of the Standard WMO Climate Normal - Antony Arguez and Russell Vose
Linguistic Dimensions of Weather and Climate Perception - Alan Stewart
Meteorological Knowledge and Environmental Ideas in Traditional and Modern Societies: The Case of Tibet - Toni Huber and Poul Pedersen
Glaciers and Climate Change: Perspectives from Oral Tradition - Julie Cruikshank
The Anxieties of a Science Diplomat: Field Coproduction of Climate Knowledge and the Rise and Fall of Hans Ahlman’s ‘Polar Warming’ - Sverker Sörlin
Representing the Global Atmosphere: Computer Models, Data and Knowledge about Climate Change - Paul Edwards
Verification, Validation and Confirmation of Numerical Models in the Earth Sciences - Naomi Oreskes, Kristin Shrader-Frechette and Kenneth Belitz
Anticipating Nature: The Productive Uncertainty of Climate Models - Kirsten Hastrup
The Global Warming of Climate Science: Climategate and the Construction of Scientific Facts - Marianne Ryghaug and Tomas Skjølsvold
Anatomy of Dissent: A Cultural Analysis of Climate Skepticism - Myanna Lahsen
Sila Dialogues on Climate Change: Inuit Wisdom for a Cross-Cultural Interdisciplinarity - Timothy Leduc
Indigenous Climate Knowledge in Southern Uganda: The Multiple Components of a Dynamic Regional System - Ben Orlove, Carla Roncoli, Merit Kabugo and Abushen Majigu
Culture, Law, Risk and Governance: Contexts of Traditional Knowledge in Climate Change Adaptation - Terry Williams and Preston Hardison
‘We Have Seen It with Our Own Eyes’: Why We Disagree about Climate Change Visibility - Peter Rudiak-Gould
VOLUME TWO: HISTORICAL READINGS OF CLIMATE
Chinese Attitudes towards Climate - Cho-yun Hsu
The Meteorological Framework and the Cultural Memory of Three Severe Winter-Storms in Early Eighteenth Century Europe - Christian Pfister, Emmanuel Garnier, Maria-João Alcoforado, Dennis Wheeler, Jürg Luterbacher, Maria Nunes and João Taborda
Time, Talk and the Weather in Eighteenth-Century Britain - Jan Golinski
Climates as Commodities: Jean Pierre Purry and the Modelling of the Best Climate on Earth - Vladimir Jankovic
Inventing Caribbean Climates: How Science, Medicine, and Tourism Changed Tropical Weather from Deadly to Healthy - Mark Carey
Seeing Climate through Culture - Lawrence Culver
Perceiving, Explaining and Observing Climatic Changes: An Historical Case Study of the ‘Year without Summer’ 1816 - Tom Bodenmann, Stefan Brönnimann, Gertrude Hadorn, Tobias Krüger and Helmut Weissert
‘The Languor of the Hot Weather’: Everyday Perspectives on Weather and Climate in Colonial Bombay, 1819–1828 - George Adamson
Drought, Desiccation and Discourse: Missionary Correspondence and Nineteenth-Century Climate Change in Central Southern Africa - Georgina Endfield and David Nash
Tropical Climate and Moral Hygiene: The Anatomy of a Victorian Debate - David Livingstone
The Perfectionists and the Weather: The Oneida Community’s Quest for Meteorological Utopia 1848–1879 - William Meyer
Modernity’s Frail Climate: A Climate History of Environmental Reflexivity - Fabien Locher and Jean-Baptiste Fressoz
The Debate over Climate Change in the Steppe Region in Nineteenth-Century Russia - David Moon
Is Global Culture Warming Up? - Andrew Ross
VOLUME THREE: CLIMATE AND AGENCY
Change in the Weather - Vladimir Jankovic
Domain of the Gods: An Editorial Essay - Simon Donner
Climatic Change and Witch-Hunting: The Impact of the Little Ice Age on Mentalities - Wolfgang Behringer
An Amazing and Portentous Summer: Environmental and Social Responses in Britain to the 1783 Eruption of an Iceland Volcano - John Grattan and Mark Brayshay
The Climate Engineers - James Fleming
Huntington and Lovelock: Climatic Determinism in the 20th Century - Kent McGregor
Climate, Race Science and the Age of Consent in the League of Nations - Ashwini Tambe
Human Agency, Climate Change and Culture: An Archaeological Perspective - Fekri Hassan
Human Adaptation to Climate Change: A Review of Three Historical Cases and Some General Perspectives - Ben Orlove
Temporality and the Problem with Singling Out Climate as a Current Driver of Change in a Small West African Village - Jonas Nielsen and Anette Reenberg
Climate Change and Conflict - Ragnhild Nordås and Nils Petter Gleditsch
The First Climate Refugees? Contesting Global Narratives of Climate Change in Tuvalu - Carol Farbotko and Heather Lazrus
Are Cultures Endangered by Climate Change? Yes, But ... - Sarah Strauss
Trust and Climate - Nico Stehr
VOLUME FOUR: CLIMATE AND CULTURE IN PLACES AND PRACTICES
A New Climate for Society - Sheila Jasanoff
Earth, Sky, Wind, and Weather - Tim Ingold
Making Sense of the Weather: Dwelling and Weathering on Canada’s Rain Coast - Phillip Vannini, Dennis Waskul, Simon Gottschalk and Toby Ellis-Newstead
Emotional Climates: Ritual, Seasonality and Affective Disorders - Simon Harrison
Seasonal Climate Change and the Indoor City Worker - Russell Hitchings
Why Indoor Climates Change: A Case Study - William Meyer
Reculturing and Particularising Climate Discourses: Weather, Identity and the Work of Gordon Manley - Georgina Endfield
Climate and Culture Connections in Australia - Neville Nicholls
An Australian Feeling for Snow: Towards Understanding Cultural and Emotional Dimensions of Climate Change - Andrew Gorman-Murray
Whether Rain or Shine: Weather Regimes from a New Guinea Perspective - Paul Sillitoe
Seasons in the Sun – Weather and Climate Front-Page News Stories in Europe’s Rainiest City, Bergen, Norway - Elisabeth Meze-Hausken
Localizing Climate Change: A Multi-Sited Approach - Werner Krauss
Progress, Decline and the Public Uptake of Climate Science - Peter Rudiak-Gould
Bare Rocks and Fallen Angels: Environmental Change, Climate Perceptions and Ritual Practice in the Peruvian Andes - Karsten Paerregaard
Human Geographies of Climate Change: Landscape, Temporality, and Lay Knowledges - Catherine Brace and Hilary Geoghegan
VOLUME FIVE: CULTURAL READINGS OF FUTURE CLIMATE
Improving Forecast Communication: Linguistic and Cultural Considerations - Karen Pennesi
“People Want to Protect Themselves a Little Bit”: Emotions, Denial and Social Movement Nonparticipation - Kari Norgaard
Commodifying the Atmosphere: ‘Pennies from Heaven’? - John Thornes and Samuel Randalls
The Right to Keep Cold - Neil Adger
The End of Model Democracy? An Editorial Comment - Reto Knutti
Democracy, Climate Change and Global Governance: Democratic Agency and the Policy Menu Ahead - David Held and Angus Hervey
Tipping Points and the Human World: Living with Change and Thinking about the Future - Mark Nuttall
Google Warming: Google Earth as Eco-Machinima - Leon Gurevitch
The Flood Myth in the Age of Global Climate Change - Michael Salvador and Todd Norton
Climate Change and Apocalyptic Faith - Stefan Skrimshire
The Unbearable Lightness of Green: Air Travel, Climate Change and Literature - Greg Garrard
Reading and Writing the Weather: Climate Technics and the Moment of Responsibility - Bronislaw Szerszynski
Metaphors We Die By? Geoengineering, Metaphors and the Argument from Catastrophe - Brigitte Nerlich and Rusi Jaspal
Geoengineering, Theology and the Meaning of Being Human - Forrest Clingerman
Reducing the Future to Climate: A Story of Climate Determinism and Reductionism - Mike Hulme
VOLUME SIX: CLIMATE CHANGE IN LITERARY, VISUAL AND PERFORMANCE CULTURES
A Change in the Climate: New Interpretations and Perceptions of Climate Change through Artistic Interventions and Representations - Lesley Duxbury
Arts, Sciences and Climate Change: Practices and Politics at the Threshold - Jennifer Gabrys and Kathryn Yusoff
‘Telling a Different Tale’: Literary, Historical and Meteorological Reading of a Norfolk Heatwave - Mike Hulme
Picturing Climate Change - Stefan Brönnimann
Picturing the Clima(c)tic: Greenpeace and the Representational Politics of Climate Change Communication - Julie Doyle
Seeing Climate Change: The Visual Construction of Global Warming in Canadian National Print Media - Darryn DiFrancesco and Nathan Young
Imaging Vulnerability: The Iconography of Climate Change - Kate Manzo
Climate Change in Literature and Literary Criticism - Adam Trexler and Adeline Johns-Putra
Solar: Apocalypse Not - Greg Garrard
Melting Ice and the Paradoxes of Zeno: Didactic Impulses and Aesthetic Distanciation in German Climate Change Fiction - Axel Goodbody
Cultural Climatology and the Representation of Sky, Atmosphere, Weather and Climate in Selected Art Works of Constable, Monet and Eliasson - John Thornes
“There’s a Storm Coming!”: Reading the Threat of Climate Change in Jeff Nichols’s Take Shelter - Agnes Woolley
Myth and Multiple Readings in Environmental Rhetoric: The Case of An Inconvenient Truth - Thomas Rosteck and Thomas Frentz
Climate Change ‘Science’ on the London Stage - Stephen Bottoms
Representing Nature: Art and Climate Change - Malcolm Miles

Erscheint lt. Verlag 9.7.2015
Reihe/Serie SAGE Library of the Environment
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 3810 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie Ökologie / Naturschutz
Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Geografie / Kartografie
Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Meteorologie / Klimatologie
ISBN-10 1-4739-0452-8 / 1473904528
ISBN-13 978-1-4739-0452-1 / 9781473904521
Zustand Neuware
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