11 contributors explore the concrete ways social nature is made and the political implications of its construction.
List of Figures. List of Contributors.Preface. Acknowledgements.1. Socializing Nature: Theory, Practice, and Politics: Noel Castree (University of Manchester).2. Being Constructive About Nature?: David Demeritt (Kings College, London).3. Nature, Poststructuralism, and Politics: Bruce Braun (University of Minnesota) and Joel Wainwright (University of Minnesota).4. The Nature of 'Race': Kay Anderson (Durham University).5. Postcolonialism and the Production of Nature: Derek Gregory (University of British Columbia).6. Gendered Natures: Feminism, Politics, and Social Nature: Jane Moeckli (University of Iowa) and Bruce Braun (University of Minnesota).7. Social Nature and Environmental Policy in the South: Views from Verandah and Veld: Piers Blaikie (University of East Anglia).8. Political Ecology: A Critical Agenda for Change?: Ray Bryant (King's College, London).9. Natural Disasters?: Mark Pelling (University of Liverpool).10. Marxism, Capitalism, and the Production of Nature: Noel Castree (University of Manchester).11. Dissolving Dualisms: Actor-networks and the Reimagination of Nature: Noel Castree (University of Manchester) and Tom MacMillan (University of Manchester).12. Solid Rock and Shifting Sands: The Moral Paradox of saving a Socially Constructed Nature: James Proctor (University of California, Santa Barbara).Index.
Nature as a concept, it is often said, is elusive, complex, promiscuous and yet familiar. Social Nature is a superb introduction to nature's complexity from the vantage point of the very best of critical geography. An excellent introduction to the epistemological thickets which have grown up around, and which threaten to strangle, our understanding of Nature as artifice and artifact. Michael Watts "No other single volume summarizes and critically reviews the geographical research on social nature." Choice