top of page
DeColonise EcoModernism!

In the 21st century, the old colonial attitude of terra nullius, meaning a vacant place free for the taking, still lurks behind the global economic expropriation of peoples' lands and bodies. Today, that theft is rationalised internationally by ecomodernist policy. This book engages with the patriarchal-colonial-capitalist mindset of the contemporary Androcene and its threats to Life-on-Earth, including global warming and nuclear risks, mining and the gene trade, the Fourth Industrial Revolution and digital coloniality.

 

Ariel Salleh spells out the social and ecological contradictions set in motion by neocolonialism. Inspired by decolonial thinkers from Arturo Escobar to Tyson Yunkaporta, and critics of technology like Vandana Shiva and Shoshana Zuboff, she argues that dispossession of First Nation peoples' livelihoods is not healed by consumerism in the name of 'development'. Breaking with ecomodernist policy such as 'the tech fix' of mainstream environmentalists, Salleh contests the patriarchal-colonial-capitalist imperium and its advocacy of Green New Deals, Earth Governance, Sustainable Development Goals, and Smart Futures.

 

Worldwide many decolonial activists see through the zero-sum imagination and its Earth Summits. Youth too, is defying the capitalist ruling class extinction trajectory, and some even challenge the fashionable post-human ideology circulating in high-tech quarters. Beyond 'exchange value', these Others of the Androcene are calling for self-governing bioregional futures, respectful of indigenous skills; they want local food sovereign economies, which meet people's needs while protecting nature's 'metabolic value'.

 

Spelling out the biopolitical violence of digitalization and genetic engineering, the book traces two decades of creative defiance by global peoples' movements against the contradictions of ecomodernist development and its ongoing imposition by international agencies.

DeColonise EcoModernism!

  • Ariel Salleh

    An eco-feminist argument for a new concept - the androscene - which imagines a new, truly intersectional world.
  • Rights Sold

    All rights available

     

    Chinese Simplified rights represented by Andrew Nurnberg Associates, Beijing

  • Book Details

    Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic
    Publication Date: 23-01-2025
    Format: Hardback | 234 x 156mm | 304 pages

  • About the Author

    Ariel Salleh is Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Humanities, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa; former Senior Fellow in Post-Growth Societies, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany and Research Associate in Political Economy, University of Sydney, Australia. She is author and editor of many books including Ecofeminism as Politics (ZED, 2017).

  • Material Available

Related Titles

Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

Registered in England No. 01984336

© Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 2020

bottom of page