| Bookchin, a critical appraisal [document électronique] / Damian F. WHITE  ; Murray BOOKCHIN (1921-2006)  . - London [UK] : Pluto Press , 2008 . - 236 p. ; PDF texte.ISBN  : 978-0-7453-1964-3Langues  : Anglais (eng ) 
					| Catégories : | COMMUNALISME ; ÉCOLOGIE ; ÉTHIQUE ; URBANISME 
 |  
					| Résumé : | PART ONE: BEGINNINGS 1 Environments, Cities and Post-Scarcity Worlds
 The Political Life of an American Radical
 Contemporary Issues
 Neither Washington nor Moscow
 The Problem of Chemicals in Food
 Our Synthetic Environment
 Emerging Themes in Bookchin’s Early Writings
 Post-Scarcity Politics and Ecology as Revolutionary Thought
 Beyond the New Left
 Mapping the Arc of Bookchin’s Work
 Intellectual Influences
 
 PART TWO: THE LEGACY OF DOMINATION
 2 Hierarchy, Domination, Nature: Bookchin’s Historical Social Theory
 Marxism and ‘Bourgeois Sociology’
 From Social Classes and the State to Social Hierarchy and Social Domination
 The Outlook of Organic Society
 The Emergence of Hierarchy
 A ‘Legacy of Domination’ and a ‘Legacy of Freedom’
 Considering Bookchin’s Historical Social Theory
 Organic Society I: Vagaries and Inconsistencies
 Organic Society II: Anthropological Evidence and Methodological Concerns
 After Ecological Romanticism
 Social Hierarchy/Social Domination
 Social Hierarchy, Social Domination and the Idea of the Dominating of Nature by Humans
 Dominant Ideologies and Actual Relations with Nature
 Time, Space, Social Production and Social Ecologies
 Domination, Liberation, and the Production,
 Reproduction and Enframing of Active Nature(s)
 Domination/Producing/Appropriating Nature
 3 Social Ecology as Modern Social Theory
 The Emergence of Capitalism
 Mapping the Contours of ‘Advanced’ Capitalism
 Developing a Critique of ‘Advanced’ Capitalism
 Defining the Environmental Agenda
 The Critique of Neo-Malthusianism
 Causality and Problem Defi nition in Socio-Ecological Critique
 Socio-Ecological Critique without Malthus
 Post-Scarcity Ecology
 The Virtues of Bookchin’s Approach to Socio-Ecological Critique
 4 Capitalism and Ecology
 The ‘Grow or Die’ Thesis
 Bookchin’s Macro Eco-Crisis Theory
 Social Ecology, Political Ecology and the Sociology of Environmental Justice
 The Sociology of Ecological Modernisation and its Critics
 Climate Change, Green Governmentality and Nature as an Accumulation Strategy
 
 PART THREE: THE LEGACY OF FREEDOM
 5 Ethics and the Normative Grounds of Critique
 Ecology and Revolutionary Thought
 Holism, Spontaneity, Non-Hierarchy
 Developing Dialectical Naturalism
 Humanity and the Natural World
 First Nature, Second Nature and Free Nature
 ‘Nature’ as the Grounds or Matrix for Ethics
 Social Ecology, Scientifi c Ecology and Evolutionary Theory
 ‘Non-Hierarchical’ and ‘Mutualistic’ Nature?
 Metaphors and Nature
 The Ecological Ethics of Social Ecology
 Social Ecology versus Deep Ecology
 Hybrid Natures and Active Subjects
 6 Urbanisation, Cities, Utopia
 ‘Crisis in Our Cities’
 Reification and the Unlimited City
 ‘The Limits of the City’
 The Humanist Concept of the City in History
 The City as a Human[e] Community: Envisaging Ecotopia
 Bookchin’s Critique of the Limitless City
 Social Ecology and the New Urbanism
 Suburbs, Ex-Urbs and Social Ecology
 Eco-Communalism or a Pluralist Eco-Urbanism?
 Social Ecology and Technology
 Free Nature: Blending or Maintaining Demarcations?
 Dissolving or Retrofi tting the Modern Metropolis?
 Utopian Dialogue as ‘Public Event’
 7 Citizens, Politics, Democracy
 The Polis and the Political
 Zoon Politikon, Paideia and Philia
 The Legacy of Freedom
 The Rise of the Free Cities, Neighbourhood Communes and City Confederations
 The Municipal Route to Modernity
 Libertarian Municipalism: From Here to There
 The History/Histor(ies) of Civic Freedom
 From Dionysus to Philia
 Polis and Cosmopolis
 Transparency and Complexity
 Between the Heroic and the Imminent
 
 PART FOUR: ENDINGS
 Conclusion
 Re-enchanting Humanity, Disenchanted Bookchin
 Breaks, Transitions, Excommunications
 (Harsh) Judgments
 New Beginnings, or More Considered Judgments
 Lessons, Legacies and Traces
 |  
					| Note de contenu : | Bibliogr., index |  
					| Mention de responsabilité : | Damian F. White |  
					| Permalink : | https://www.cira.ch/catalogue/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=312203 | 
					| Titre : | Bookchin, a critical appraisal |  
					| Type de document : | document électronique |  
					| Auteurs : | Damian F. WHITE ; Murray BOOKCHIN (1921-2006) |  
					| Editeur : | London [UK] : Pluto Press |  
					| Année de publication : | 2008 |  
					| Importance : | 236 p. |  
					| Format : | PDF texte |  
					| ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-7453-1964-3 |  
					| Langues : | Anglais (eng) |  
					| Catégories : | COMMUNALISME ; ÉCOLOGIE ; ÉTHIQUE ; URBANISME 
 |  
					| Résumé : | PART ONE: BEGINNINGS 1 Environments, Cities and Post-Scarcity Worlds
 The Political Life of an American Radical
 Contemporary Issues
 Neither Washington nor Moscow
 The Problem of Chemicals in Food
 Our Synthetic Environment
 Emerging Themes in Bookchin’s Early Writings
 Post-Scarcity Politics and Ecology as Revolutionary Thought
 Beyond the New Left
 Mapping the Arc of Bookchin’s Work
 Intellectual Influences
 
 PART TWO: THE LEGACY OF DOMINATION
 2 Hierarchy, Domination, Nature: Bookchin’s Historical Social Theory
 Marxism and ‘Bourgeois Sociology’
 From Social Classes and the State to Social Hierarchy and Social Domination
 The Outlook of Organic Society
 The Emergence of Hierarchy
 A ‘Legacy of Domination’ and a ‘Legacy of Freedom’
 Considering Bookchin’s Historical Social Theory
 Organic Society I: Vagaries and Inconsistencies
 Organic Society II: Anthropological Evidence and Methodological Concerns
 After Ecological Romanticism
 Social Hierarchy/Social Domination
 Social Hierarchy, Social Domination and the Idea of the Dominating of Nature by Humans
 Dominant Ideologies and Actual Relations with Nature
 Time, Space, Social Production and Social Ecologies
 Domination, Liberation, and the Production,
 Reproduction and Enframing of Active Nature(s)
 Domination/Producing/Appropriating Nature
 3 Social Ecology as Modern Social Theory
 The Emergence of Capitalism
 Mapping the Contours of ‘Advanced’ Capitalism
 Developing a Critique of ‘Advanced’ Capitalism
 Defining the Environmental Agenda
 The Critique of Neo-Malthusianism
 Causality and Problem Defi nition in Socio-Ecological Critique
 Socio-Ecological Critique without Malthus
 Post-Scarcity Ecology
 The Virtues of Bookchin’s Approach to Socio-Ecological Critique
 4 Capitalism and Ecology
 The ‘Grow or Die’ Thesis
 Bookchin’s Macro Eco-Crisis Theory
 Social Ecology, Political Ecology and the Sociology of Environmental Justice
 The Sociology of Ecological Modernisation and its Critics
 Climate Change, Green Governmentality and Nature as an Accumulation Strategy
 
 PART THREE: THE LEGACY OF FREEDOM
 5 Ethics and the Normative Grounds of Critique
 Ecology and Revolutionary Thought
 Holism, Spontaneity, Non-Hierarchy
 Developing Dialectical Naturalism
 Humanity and the Natural World
 First Nature, Second Nature and Free Nature
 ‘Nature’ as the Grounds or Matrix for Ethics
 Social Ecology, Scientifi c Ecology and Evolutionary Theory
 ‘Non-Hierarchical’ and ‘Mutualistic’ Nature?
 Metaphors and Nature
 The Ecological Ethics of Social Ecology
 Social Ecology versus Deep Ecology
 Hybrid Natures and Active Subjects
 6 Urbanisation, Cities, Utopia
 ‘Crisis in Our Cities’
 Reification and the Unlimited City
 ‘The Limits of the City’
 The Humanist Concept of the City in History
 The City as a Human[e] Community: Envisaging Ecotopia
 Bookchin’s Critique of the Limitless City
 Social Ecology and the New Urbanism
 Suburbs, Ex-Urbs and Social Ecology
 Eco-Communalism or a Pluralist Eco-Urbanism?
 Social Ecology and Technology
 Free Nature: Blending or Maintaining Demarcations?
 Dissolving or Retrofi tting the Modern Metropolis?
 Utopian Dialogue as ‘Public Event’
 7 Citizens, Politics, Democracy
 The Polis and the Political
 Zoon Politikon, Paideia and Philia
 The Legacy of Freedom
 The Rise of the Free Cities, Neighbourhood Communes and City Confederations
 The Municipal Route to Modernity
 Libertarian Municipalism: From Here to There
 The History/Histor(ies) of Civic Freedom
 From Dionysus to Philia
 Polis and Cosmopolis
 Transparency and Complexity
 Between the Heroic and the Imminent
 
 PART FOUR: ENDINGS
 Conclusion
 Re-enchanting Humanity, Disenchanted Bookchin
 Breaks, Transitions, Excommunications
 (Harsh) Judgments
 New Beginnings, or More Considered Judgments
 Lessons, Legacies and Traces
 |  
					| Note de contenu : | Bibliogr., index |  
					| Mention de responsabilité : | Damian F. White |  
					| Permalink : | https://www.cira.ch/catalogue/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=312203 | 
 |  |