Engaging Nature: Environmentalism and the Political Theory Canon
Engaging Nature: Environmentalism and the Political Theory Canon
Cite
Abstract
Engaging Nature is an edited collection that explores how past political theorists conceptualized the natural world and humanity’s relationship with it. The theorists profiled are largely from the Western canon, but other influential theorists have been included in order to bring in insights related to race, gender, and non-Western perspectives. The theorists covered in the book are: Plato, Aristotle, Niccolò Machiavelli, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, David Hume, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Edmund Burke, Mary Wollstonecraft, John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx, W. E. B. Du Bois, Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, and Confucius. The essays also draw insights from these theorists into how we might address our contemporary environmental crisis. In many cases, the authors present unorthodox readings of particular theorists who have been pigeonholed as ‘anti-environmentalist’ or not recognized for their insights into nature and environmental issues. The essays also highlight the complexity of Western political thought in its approach to nature, as many individual theorists present perspectives that transcend anthropocentrism. In pursuing a chronological review of Western thinkers but then ending with Confucius, the editors also wish to highlight the importance of expanding the discussion beyond the Western canon. This book is intended for a fairly broad audience, from advanced undergraduates to mature scholars in both political theory and environmental studies.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: How We Got Here
Peter F. Cannavò andJoseph H. Lane
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1
Plato: Private Property and Agriculture for the Commoners—Humans and the Natural World in The Republic
Sheryl D. Breen
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2
Aristotle: Phusis, Praxis, and the Good
Özgüç Orhan
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3
Niccolò Machiavelli: Rethinking Decentralization’s Role in Green Theory
Francisco Seijo
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4
Thomas Hobbes: Relating Nature and Politics
John M. Meyer
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5
John Locke: “This Habitable Earth of Ours”
Zev Trachtenberg
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6
David Hume: Justice and the Environment
Andrew Valls
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7
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: The Disentangling of Green Paradoxes
Joseph H. Lane
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8
Edmund Burke: The Nature of Politics
Harlan Wilson
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9
Mary Wollstonecraft: “Systemiz[ing] Oppression”—Feminism, Nature, and Animals
Barbara K. Seeber
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10
John Stuart Mill: The Greening of the Liberal Heritage
Piers H. G. Stephens
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11
Karl Marx: Critique of Political Economy as Environmental Political Theory
Timothy W. Luke
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12
W. E. B. Du Bois: Racial Inequality and Alienation from Nature
Kimberly K. Smith
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13
Martin Heidegger: Individual and Collective Responsibility
W. S. K. Cameron
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14
Hannah Arendt: Place, World, and Earthly Nature
Peter F. Cannavò
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15
Confucius: How Non-Western Political Theory Contributes to Understanding the Environmental Crisis
Joel Jay Kassiola
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Conclusion: The Western Political Theory Canon, Nature, and a Broader Dialogue
Peter F. Cannavò andJoseph H. Lane
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End Matter
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