Svalbard Imaginaries

Svalbard Imaginaries
Title Svalbard Imaginaries PDF eBook
Author Mathias Albert
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 303
Release 2023-12-20
Genre Political Science
ISBN 3031438418

Download Svalbard Imaginaries Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

By drawing on a broad range of disciplinary backgrounds, this book illustrates the immense complexities of Svalbard as a place, point of reference, or social concept. It portrays the multiple, situated perspectives that characterize understandings and imaginings of Svalbard, and brings together contributions from academic fields that rarely interact with each other. Svalbard Imaginaries contributes to a number of research contexts, ranging from a broadly conceived, multi-disciplinary field of ‘Arctic Studies’ to more disciplinary specific debates on how places are reworked at the interstices of various global flows and vice versa. It assembles contributions on imaginaries that cover a wide array of issues, including—but not limited to—Svalbard as a geopolitical site, a landscape, an image, a (mining) heritage assemblage, a tourist destination, a wilderness, a built environment, a site of knowledge production, a site of artistic engagement, and projections of the future. It deliberately assembles analyses that refer to a variety of timescales and covers representations of the past, the present, and possible futures of Svalbard.

Anthropocene Ecologies

Anthropocene Ecologies
Title Anthropocene Ecologies PDF eBook
Author Mary Mostafanezhad
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 273
Release 2020-06-09
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1000026027

Download Anthropocene Ecologies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Anthropocene Ecologies brings political ecology and tourism studies to bear on the Anthropocene. Through a collective examination of political ecologies of the Anthropocene by leading scholars in anthropology, geography and tourism studies, the book addresses critical themes of gender, health, conservation, agriculture, climate change, disaster, coastal marine management and sustainability. Each chapter theoretically and empirically unravels entanglements of tourism, nature and imagination to expose the political-ecological drivers of the Anthropocene as a material and symbolic force and its deepening integration with tourism. Grounded in ethnographic and qualitative research, the volume is interdisciplinary in scope, yet linked in its shared focus on the political threat as well as the social potential of the Anthropocene and its imaginaries. This collection contributes to emerging scholarship on tourism, sustainability and global environmental change in the current geological epoch. Anthropocene Ecologies will be of great interest to political ecology focused scholars of tourism, socio-environmental change and the Anthropocene. The chapters were originally published as a special issue in the Journal of Sustainable Tourism.

Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North

Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North
Title Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North PDF eBook
Author Graham Huggan
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 163
Release 2016-07-26
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1137588179

Download Postcolonial Perspectives on the European High North Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book approaches the Arctic from a postcolonial perspective, taking into account both its historical status as a colonised region and new, economically driven forms of colonialism. One catchphrase currently being used to describe these new colonialisms is 'the scramble for the Arctic'. This cross-disciplinary study, featuring contributions from an international team of experts in the field, offers a set of broadly postcolonial perspectives on the European Arctic, which is taken here as ranging from Greenland and Iceland in the North Atlantic to the upper regions of Norway and Sweden in the European High North. While the contributors acknowledge the renewed scramble for resources that characterises the region, it also argues the need to 'unscramble' the Arctic, wresting it away from its persistent status as a fixed object of western control and knowledge. Instead, the book encourages a reassertion of micro-histories of Arctic space and territory that complicate western grand narratives of technological progress, politico-economic development, and ecological 'state change'. It will be of interest to scholars of Arctic Studies across all disciplines.

New Arctic Cinemas

New Arctic Cinemas
Title New Arctic Cinemas PDF eBook
Author Anna Westerstahl Stenport
Publisher Univ of California Press
Total Pages 368
Release 2023-03-14
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 0520390563

Download New Arctic Cinemas Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

For centuries, the Arctic was visualized as an unchanging, stable, and rigidly alien landscape, existing outside twenty-first-century globalization. It is now impossible to ignore the ways the climate crisis, expanding resource extraction, and Indigenous political mobilization in the circumpolar North are constituent parts of the global present. New Arctic Cinemas presents an original, comparative, and interventionist historiography of film and media in twenty-first-century Scandinavia, Greenland, Russia, Canada, and the United States to situate Arctic media in the place it rightfully deserves to occupy: as central to global environmental concerns and Indigenous media sovereignty and self-determination movements. The works of contemporary Arctic filmmakers, from Zacharias Kunuk and Alethea Arnaquq-Baril to Amanda Kernell and Inuk Silis Høegh, reach worldwide audiences. In examining the reach and influence of these artists and their work, Scott MacKenzie and Anna Westerstahl Stenport reveal a global media system of intertwined production contexts, circulation opportunities, and imaginaries—all centering the Arctic North.

Human and Societal Security in the Circumpolar Arctic

Human and Societal Security in the Circumpolar Arctic
Title Human and Societal Security in the Circumpolar Arctic PDF eBook
Author Kamrul Hossain
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 423
Release 2018-09-06
Genre Law
ISBN 9004363041

Download Human and Societal Security in the Circumpolar Arctic Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Human and Societal Security in the Circumpolar Arctic addresses the comprehensive understanding of security in the Arctic, and specific challenges of the Arctic population from the viewpoint of human security.

The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics

The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics
Title The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics PDF eBook
Author Ken S. Coates
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 567
Release 2019-11-14
Genre Political Science
ISBN 3030205576

Download The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The Arctic has, for some forty years, been among the most innovative policy environments in the world. The region has developed impressive systems for intra-regional cooperation, responded to the challenges of the rapid environmental change, empowered and engaged with Indigenous peoples, and dealt with the multiple challenges of natural resource development. The Palgrave Handbook on Arctic Policy and Politics has drawn on scholars from many countries and academic disciplines to focus on the central theme of Arctic policy innovation. The portrait that emerges from these chapters is of a complex, fluid policy environment, shaped by internal, national and global dynamics and by a wide range of political, legal, economic, and social transitions. The Arctic is a complex place from a political perspective and is on the verge of becoming even more so. Effective, proactive and forward-looking policy innovation will be required if the Far North is to be able to address its challenges and capitalize on its opportunities.

Roman Social Imaginaries

Roman Social Imaginaries
Title Roman Social Imaginaries PDF eBook
Author Clifford Ando
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Total Pages 135
Release 2015-01-01
Genre History
ISBN 1442650176

Download Roman Social Imaginaries Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In an expansion of his 2012 Robson Classical Lectures, Clifford Ando examines the connection between the nature of the Latin language and Roman thinking about law, society, and empire. Drawing on innovative work in cognitive linguistics and anthropology, Roman Social Imaginaries considers how metaphor, metonymy, analogy, and ideation helped create the structures of thought that shaped the Roman Empire as a political construct. Beginning in early Roman history, Ando shows how the expansion of the empire into new territories led the Romans to develop and exploit Latin's extraordinary capacity for abstraction. In this way, laws and institutions invented for use in a single Mediterranean city-state could be deployed across a remarkably heterogeneous empire. Lucid, insightful, and innovative, the essays in Roman Social Imaginaries constitute some of today's most original thinking about the power of language in the ancient world.