At work in the ruins Finding our place in the time of science, climate change, pandemics and all the other emergencies

Dougald Hine

Book - 2023

"Invited to speak at gatherings with scientists and policymakers, with archbishops, Indigenous activists and students, Dougald Hine, storyteller and social thinker, has spent most of his life talking to people about climate change. And then one afternoon in the second year of the pandemic, he realized he had nothing left to say. Why would someone who cares so deeply about ecological change want to stop talking about it now? At Work in the Ruins is the book that grew out of Dougald's attempt to answer that question. He delves deeply into what he discovered during the globally shared, isolating Covid moment; why the virus and the measures taken against it drove so many of us to despair; and how we can refind our bearings if the pand...emic is not the big event that changes everything but simply one in a chain of emergencies that are bringing about the end of the world as we knew it. At Work in the Ruins explores the role science is playing in shaping public policy and how this is deteriorating our appreciation for the natural world, our capacity for short and long-term problem-solving, which results in the erosion of our freedom. Dougald questions our seemingly unbreakable attachment to modernity and how it blinds us to the numbing effects of relentless emergencies, including climate change and the pandemic. At Work in the Ruins is a book for anyone who has found themselves needing to make sense of what we've been through, what is ending, and how we learn to talk about it. Only then can we choose to face the problems that really matter so that we can find solace at work in the ruins"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

152.4/Hine
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 152.4/Hine Checked In
Subjects
Published
White River Junction, Vermont : Chelsea Green Publishing [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Dougald Hine (author)
Physical Description
213 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781645021841
  • First There Must Be an End
  • Part I. How This Started
  • 1. Talking About Climate Change
  • 2. The Trouble We're In
  • 3. Four Conversations
  • Part II. Asking Too Much of Science
  • 4. The Only Prediction I Am Going to Make
  • 5. The Upstream Questions
  • 6. Steering by Numbers
  • 7. Hanging Over the Void
  • 8. Tell Me the Truth About Science
  • 9. Potemkin Villagers
  • 10. What I Am Not Saying
  • Part III. When Everything Changed
  • 11. Behind the Science
  • 12. How to Think
  • 13. What to Believe
  • 14. Here Come the Grown-Ups
  • 15. Shades of Denial
  • Part IV. What Just Happened
  • 16. An Illness That Fits the Cure
  • 17. The Modern Way of Dying
  • 18. Footsteps in the Sand
  • 19. When a Society Gets Sick
  • Part V. Where We Find Ourselves
  • 20. The Fish Tank
  • 21. Two Roads Diverged
  • 22. No Left Turn
  • 23. How to Give Up
  • 24. Knowing Enough
  • Where to Begin
  • Acknowledgements
  • Notes
Review by Library Journal Review

Hine, a British former journalist living in Sweden, dives deep into the conversations around awareness, activism, and emotions connected to world crises. Coauthor of Uncivilization: The Dark Mountain Manifesto in 2009, Hine spoke not of saving the current systems but of building new ones. Now he calls for a shift in how people make decisions and plan for the future. Without dismissing the importance of governments or science, Hine writes that an important first step is acknowledging that governments and science don't have ready solutions for all the problems people face. Hine explores the role of fiction, art, and theater in building resilience. Looking ahead, he seeks options, not optimism, and works to advance the conversation around climate change and other global crises from a Western perspective, with the aim of encouraging dialogue beyond binary ideologies. VERDICT A thought-provoking suggestion for readers well versed in climate discourse.--Catherine Lantz

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.