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On the Emergence of an Ecological Class
A Memo
von Bruno Latour, Nikolaj Schultz
Übersetzung: Julie Rose
Verlag: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-5095-5505-5
Erschienen am 11.11.2022
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 192 mm [H] x 124 mm [B] x 14 mm [T]
Gewicht: 206 Gramm
Umfang: 92 Seiten

Preis: 52,00 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Bruno Latour was Emeritus Professor at the Institut d'études politiques (Sciences Po) in Paris.

Nikolaj Schultz is a sociologist and PhD candidate at the University of Copenhagen.



Table of contents:I:  Class struggles and classification struggles
II: A prodigious extension of materialism
III: The great turnaround
IV: A class that's legitimate again
V:   A misalignment of affects
VI: A different sense of history in a different cosmos
VII: The ecological class is potentially in the majority
VIII: The indispensable and too often abandoned battle of ideas
IX: Winning power, but what kind?
X:   Filling the emptiness of the public space from below



Under what conditions could ecology, instead of being one cluster of movements among others, organise politics around an agenda and a set of beliefs? Can ecology aspire to define the political horizon in the way that liberalism, socialism, conservatism and other political ideologies have done at various times and places? What can ecology learn from history about how new political movements emerge, and how they win the struggle for ideas long before they translate their ideas into parties and elections?
In this short text, consisting of seventy-six talking points, Bruno Latour and Nikolaj Schultz argue that if the ecological movement is to gain ideological consistency and autonomy it must offer a political narrative that recognises, embraces and effectively represents its project in terms of social conflict. Political ecology must accept that it brings along division. It must provide a convincing cartography of the conflicts it generates and, based on this, it must try to define a common horizon of collective action. In order to represent and describe these conflicts, Latour and Schultz propose to reuse the old notions of 'class' and 'class struggle', albeit infused with a new meaning in line with the ecological concerns of our New Climate Regime. Advancing the idea of a new ecological class, assembled by its collective interests in fighting the logic of production and safeguarding our planet's conditions of habitability, they ask: how can a proud and self-aware ecological class emerge and take effective action to shape our collective future?


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