articleThe Journal of Peasant StudiesMar 17, 2017Closed access

The Capitalocene, Part I: on the nature and origins of our ecological crisis

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Abstract

This essay, in two parts, argues for the centrality of historical thinking in coming to grips with capitalism’s planetary crises of the twenty-first century. Against the Anthropocene’s shallow historicization, I argue for the Capitalocene, understood as a system of power, profit and re/production in the web of life. In Part I, I pursue two arguments. First, I situate the Anthropocene discourse within Green Thought’s uneasy relationship to the Human/Nature binary, and its reluctance to consider human organizations – like capitalism – as part of nature. Next, I highlight the Anthropocene’s dominant periodization, which meets up with a longstanding environmentalist argument about the Industrial Revolution as the…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Anthropocene
  • Capitalism
  • Ecological crisis
  • Periodization
  • Environmental ethics
  • Industrial Revolution
  • Power (physics)
  • Sociology
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