Climate change reception studies in anthropology
Autor: | Sara de Wit, Sophie Haines |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Atmospheric Science
Global and Planetary Change empirical hermeneutics History Geography Planning and Development Reception theory translation Climate change Environmental ethics knowledge encounters power Power (social and political) reception studies geographies of reception anthropology climate change anthropology climate change discourse |
Zdroj: | de Wit, S & Haines, S 2022, ' Climate change reception studies in anthropology ', Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change . https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.742 |
ISSN: | 1757-7799 1757-7780 |
DOI: | 10.1002/wcc.742 |
Popis: | The past decade has seen increased anthropological attention to understandings of climate change not only as a biophysical phenomenon but also as a discourse that is traveling from international policy making platforms to the rest of the planet. The analysis of the uptake of climate change discourse falls under the emergent subfield of climate change reception studies. A few anthropological investigations identify themselves explicitly as reception studies; others only mention the term with little explanation. Our review discusses a fuller range of anthropological studies and ethnographies from related disciplines that treat climate change as a discursive reality, which is not independent from how it is intimated through close observations of the environment. The following themes emerged: language and expertise; place and vulnerability; modernity, morality and temporality; alterity and refusal. The review suggests that the interaction of observation and reception is still not well understood, and that there is scope for more systematic methodological and theoretical synthesis, taking lessons into account from geographies of reading and empirical hermeneutics. By exploring the hermeneutical problem of upholding scientific integrity while being open to other ways of knowing, climate change reception studies’ emancipatory potential lie in opening up knowledge spaces for multi-directional and democratic approaches to living (with) climate change. In closing, we propose an interdisciplinary research agenda highlighting the potential generativity of translation as an idiom for theory and praxis relating to how people come to know climate (change) – through both perceptual engagement with the natural world and interpretations of discursive manifestations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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