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Planetary Rifting and the Paleogeography of Care

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Planetary Rifting and the Paleogeography of Care. / Clark, Nigel; Whittle, Rebecca.
In: Environmental Humanities, Vol. 15, No. 3, 01.11.2023, p. 219-234.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Clark N, Whittle R. Planetary Rifting and the Paleogeography of Care. Environmental Humanities. 2023 Nov 1;15(3):219-234. doi: 10.1215/22011919-10746100

Author

Clark, Nigel ; Whittle, Rebecca. / Planetary Rifting and the Paleogeography of Care. In: Environmental Humanities. 2023 ; Vol. 15, No. 3. pp. 219-234.

Bibtex

@article{723dd17480284504ba3cf3b4514f0764,
title = "Planetary Rifting and the Paleogeography of Care",
abstract = "With their spectre of intergenerational betrayal, global environmental crises increasingly entangle politics with matters of care, attachment and love – especially the unconditional bonds we are so often assumed to share with our offspring. As a contribution to the nascent field of paleoenvironmental humanities, our approach to questions of care and responsibility turns from future horizon-scanning to the realm of human origins. The paper focuses on two broad sets of paleo stories which share a concern with rifts or stress points that complicate originary events and scenes. The first of these is a family of hypotheses which propose that pivotal evolutionary developments took place in the climatically variable and tectonically active terrain of the East African Rift. The second is the co-operative breeding hypothesis which contends that communally distributed childcare arrangements are a definitive characteristic of the genus Homo, while also highlighting the conditionality and precariousness of human intergenerational care. Taken together these approaches point to deep-seated fault-lines running through both our home planet and our own psychosocial being. Confronting these rifts, we argue, might help loosen the hold of notions of ontological reconciliation between humans and nature that risk exacerbating the very problems they seek to resolve, while also helping us to seek attachments that are more conducive to living with and through earthly volatility. ",
keywords = "climate change, human origins, evolution, child raising, paleoenvironmental humanities, environmental humanities",
author = "Nigel Clark and Rebecca Whittle",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1215/22011919-10746100",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "219--234",
journal = "Environmental Humanities",
issn = "2201-1919",
publisher = "Duke University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Planetary Rifting and the Paleogeography of Care

AU - Clark, Nigel

AU - Whittle, Rebecca

PY - 2023/11/1

Y1 - 2023/11/1

N2 - With their spectre of intergenerational betrayal, global environmental crises increasingly entangle politics with matters of care, attachment and love – especially the unconditional bonds we are so often assumed to share with our offspring. As a contribution to the nascent field of paleoenvironmental humanities, our approach to questions of care and responsibility turns from future horizon-scanning to the realm of human origins. The paper focuses on two broad sets of paleo stories which share a concern with rifts or stress points that complicate originary events and scenes. The first of these is a family of hypotheses which propose that pivotal evolutionary developments took place in the climatically variable and tectonically active terrain of the East African Rift. The second is the co-operative breeding hypothesis which contends that communally distributed childcare arrangements are a definitive characteristic of the genus Homo, while also highlighting the conditionality and precariousness of human intergenerational care. Taken together these approaches point to deep-seated fault-lines running through both our home planet and our own psychosocial being. Confronting these rifts, we argue, might help loosen the hold of notions of ontological reconciliation between humans and nature that risk exacerbating the very problems they seek to resolve, while also helping us to seek attachments that are more conducive to living with and through earthly volatility.

AB - With their spectre of intergenerational betrayal, global environmental crises increasingly entangle politics with matters of care, attachment and love – especially the unconditional bonds we are so often assumed to share with our offspring. As a contribution to the nascent field of paleoenvironmental humanities, our approach to questions of care and responsibility turns from future horizon-scanning to the realm of human origins. The paper focuses on two broad sets of paleo stories which share a concern with rifts or stress points that complicate originary events and scenes. The first of these is a family of hypotheses which propose that pivotal evolutionary developments took place in the climatically variable and tectonically active terrain of the East African Rift. The second is the co-operative breeding hypothesis which contends that communally distributed childcare arrangements are a definitive characteristic of the genus Homo, while also highlighting the conditionality and precariousness of human intergenerational care. Taken together these approaches point to deep-seated fault-lines running through both our home planet and our own psychosocial being. Confronting these rifts, we argue, might help loosen the hold of notions of ontological reconciliation between humans and nature that risk exacerbating the very problems they seek to resolve, while also helping us to seek attachments that are more conducive to living with and through earthly volatility.

KW - climate change

KW - human origins

KW - evolution

KW - child raising

KW - paleoenvironmental humanities

KW - environmental humanities

U2 - 10.1215/22011919-10746100

DO - 10.1215/22011919-10746100

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

SP - 219

EP - 234

JO - Environmental Humanities

JF - Environmental Humanities

SN - 2201-1919

IS - 3

ER -