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hatrack

(59,587 posts)
Sun Mar 8, 2015, 10:29 AM Mar 2015

Welcome To The Misanthropocene

EDIT

But we're killing ourselves off in other ways, too. And this is what I find so interesting. This is where the Misanthropocene hits its full stride: we're so misanthropic we're busy disappearing humanity from more than just the face of the planet. We're caught up in what I describe as a wave of cultural misanthropy in which we imagine again and again our own deaths, our obliteration, our demise, our uselessness and ultimately our irrelevance.

I see this happening in at least three distinct ways.

1. FIRST, we know that the environmental crisis requires human intervention and yet, at the same time, we know that the environmental crisis was caused by blind and often hubristic human intervention. So now we're caught in this horrible bind where we know we need to do something and yet no longer trust ourselves to do it right (some will argue that the sciences still harbour a dangerous humanocentric and rationalistic faith in human human ability, but I would argue that even that is changing. At least, if you look at the recent IPCC reports on the state of climate science, you'll see some of the world's top scientists acknowledge that we're hurtling towards an unknown future that is becoming increasingly uncontrollable and that we should start looking to non-western, non-traditional ways of being, like indigenous cultures, for cues to non-destructive human-nature relationships).

2. SECOND. The next way I see this happening is in our cultural obsession with apocalypse and eco-disaster narratives. We are clearly interested in exploring doomsday narratives - whether they be driven by natural disasters, human accident or zombies - that investigate a world after the human. We can see through the apocalypse theme so popular now in speculative fiction, including hits like Cormac McCarthy's The Road or Max Brooks' World War Z, or Margaret Atwood's MaddAddam trilogy, or television series like The Walking Dead, that we are keen to explore storylines that remove humanity from the face of the earth.

3. THIRD. My final area of interest involves the recent turn towards post-humanism and speculative realism in contemporary theory and philosophy. By post-humanism here I mostly mean the critical practice as it inheres in the post-anthropocentric vein of philosophical and theoretical thought (rather than in the transhumanist vein which explores bio and technological transcendence of the human - although that is arguable a manifestation of human self-hatred, or misanthropy, too). Much like cultural representations of the zombie apocalypse, the theoretical trend to 'disappear' the human from thinking - to make epistemology post-human - is critical to understanding not only how western individuals think themselves in the Misanthropocene, but how humanity attempts to think beyond the human, or outside the traditional realm of human reason, values and concerns.

EDIT

http://www.themisanthropocene.com/

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Welcome To The Misanthropocene (Original Post) hatrack Mar 2015 OP
And I see someone with too much free time and money Demeter Mar 2015 #1
It's impossible to have "too much free time" and websites are inexpensive. hunter Mar 2015 #2
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
1. And I see someone with too much free time and money
Sun Mar 8, 2015, 10:50 AM
Mar 2015

while most are trying to keep body and soul together, in spite of the best efforts of the New World Order, Banksters, Corporations and their own government to kill us all off.

Is the US going to tell China to shut down?

Who turned China on in the first place? American capitalists, that's who.

Picking on individuals, trying to make them feel guilty, is inherently dishonest.

hunter

(38,312 posts)
2. It's impossible to have "too much free time" and websites are inexpensive.
Sun Mar 8, 2015, 01:29 PM
Mar 2015

Anyone who participates in this world economy is an accomplice.

I'm not going to fault anyone for opening a website, I have a few. Nor am I going to fault anyone for having enough free time to post here on DU, because it's obvious I do.

I don't believe "The Devil finds work for idle hands," rather I believe the devil finds wearying useless work for God's children so they'll all be too tired, too demoralized, or too distracted to fight.

There's not one True Path® for making this world a better place.

My own political activism (or perhaps political passive-aggressiveness) is much grittier and less wordy than the misanthropocene site, I'm not a fan of that sort of writing, nor am I capable of it, but I don't understand why you are calling themisanthropocene.com "inherently dishonest."

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