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Full Description
This volume presents new philosophical perspectives on environmental emotions. It explores the motivating nature of emotions such as anger, grief, and hope in relation to the current climate crisis.
Many of our emotional responses to the climate crisis take a distressed form like anxiety, despair, or grief. However, these emotions almost always coexist with hope, a drive toward action, or a strengthened sense of relationality and belonging. This book explores the different levels at which these tensions take place. Part I discusses the conceptual and linguistic notions we use to make sense of our ecological predicament. Part II looks at the embedded dimension of our emotions: how we feel about the climate crisis as members of our communities and how our emotions are interconnected with what we do and how we work in and for our communities. Several chapters in this section explicitly discuss hope. Finally, Part III has a phenomenological and existential focus: it explores the nature of the rootedness and how it shapes our emotional experiences during the climate crisis.
The Philosophy of Environmental Emotions will appeal to scholars and graduate students working in environmental philosophy, philosophy of emotion, and environmental psychology.
Contents
Foreword "Adversity is the first path to truth": How climate grief could be the making of us Rupert Read The Philosophy of Environmental Emotions: Introduction Ondřej Beran, Laura Candiotto, Niklas Forsberg, Antony Fredriksson, and David Rozen Part I: Language, Concepts, and Sense-making 1. Clarifying Climate Emotions via their Foci David Rozen, Petr Vaškovic and Gabriela Vičanová 2. Conceptual Change in Emotional Contexts Niklas Forsberg 3. Beyond "Grievability": Toward an Affective and Moral Lexicon for the Anthropocene Maria Antonaccio 4. How to Speak of Nonhuman Ghosts: Language, Moral Beauty, and Animal Ethical Mourning Elisa Aaltola Part II: Living in Community 5. Hope and Agency in a Time of Environmental Upheaval Nora Hämäläinen 6. Hope and Realizing the Potentials of the Past Kenneth Shockley 7. Natality, Parenthood, and Climate Hope Tom Whyman 8. No Hope Without Hope for All: Arendt and Hope as a Communal Endeavour Rooted in the Shared Condition of Natality Olena Kushyna 9. Putting Grief to Work: Planting Hope for Rainforest-Futures as a Multispecies Care Ella Chiara Vallelonga 10. Friendship and Politics Ondřej Beran Part III: The Displaced Self 11. Loving a Place that is Dying Laura Candiotto 12. Kinship and Relationality as Foundations for Environmental Emotions Antony Fredriksson 13. In Defence of Despair about Climate Breakdown Anh-Quân Nguyen 14. Ecological Grief, Ambiguous Loss, and the Slow Violence of Extraction Anna Gleizer and Pablo Fernandez Velasco Afterword 15. Environmental Grief, Despair, and Meaning: Concluding Discussion Panu Pihkala