Adam Wickberg is a researcher in the history of media and environment at KTH Stockholm, Sweden, and a visiting research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for History of Science in Berlin (MPWIG I), Germany.
Johan Gärdebo is a researcher in the history of climate transition policies and environmental expertise at Uppsala University, Sweden, and a visiting research fellow at the University of Cambridge, UK.
1. Editors' Introduction: What is Environing Media?, Part 1: Colonial Environing Media, 2. Environing Empires and Colonial Media, Part 2: Planetary Environing Media, 3. Environing and the Human-Earth Relationship: Synchronizing Geo-Anthropology, 4. Planetary Environing: The Biosphere and the Earth System, 5. 1948, Part 3: Elemental Environing Media, 6. Winds, Miasma, Pollution: Pathologies of the Air as an Environing Medium, 7. Ocean Environing Media: Datafication of the Deep Sea, 8. Environing Time: Mediating Climate Modeling, 9. Timing the Ocean Floor: Environing Media and the Swedish Deep-Sea Expedition (1947-1948), Afterword: Catch the Vapors: Getting Steamrolled by Environing Media
This edited volume interrogates the role of media technologies in the formation of environments, understood both as physical spaces and as epistemological constructs about them. Using the concept of 'environing media', the book advances a deeper understanding of how media processes - defined here as the storage, process, and transmission of data - influence human-Earth relations.
Virtually all aspects of the interconnected global ecological crisis can be related to the intensification and acceleration of scaling up the human imprint on the planet by technological means. Combining ideas from the humanities, arts, and humanistic social sciences, Environing Media offers a perspective on how we entered the current geological epoch - the Anthropocene. The ten chapters explore colonial, planetary, and elemental environing media, with cases including indigenous history, ocean monitoring, computational history, climate modeling, environmental history, the air as medium, the biosphere, and the Earth system.
Drawing upon a breadth of examples and expertise in history, anthropology, geography, cultural history, science and technology studies, and media studies, the book discovers a novel approach to human-Earth histories that demonstrates how technologies have mediated between humans and environments and in the process contributed to a societal feedback loop between knowing and doing environment, each impacting the other. Environing Media is a timely addition for scholars and upper-level students in environmental humanities and media studies.
The Open Access version of chapters 1, 2, 4, 5, and 7 available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781003282891, have been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.