"Black gold. Liquid sunlight. Texas tea. Oil remains the commodity of our global era. Wars are fought over it. Some communities are displaced by its extraction. But despite its heated history, few will ever see oil on the ground. Shrouded within a labyrinth of oil fields, pipelines, and manufacturies, it tends to be known only through its magical effects: the thrill of the road, the euphoria of flight, and the metamorphic allure of everything from vinyl records to celluloid film and synthetic clothing. Amid a warming world unleashed by fossil fuels, oil appears as a rich resource for thinking about histories of globalization and technology no less than the energetic underpinnings of literature, film, and art"--
Michael Tondre is Associate Professor of English at Stony Brook University, SUNY, USA. He is the author of The Physics of Possibility: Victorian Fiction, Science, and Gender (2018).
Introduction: The Crude and the Refined
I Origins: Carbon Creation Myths
II Reproduction: From Dinosaur Juice to This American Life
III Culture: Full-Throttle Fiction
IV Blood: Petroviolence, Fast and Slow
V Disinformation: On Fossil Footbinds (A Polemic)
VI Futures: Field Notes from the Great Transition
Epilogue: Salvage Dreams
Index