Ecosocialist bookshelf — October

October 5, 2021
Issue 

Climate and Capitalism editor Ian Angus presents seven new books for understanding and changing the world.


by George Hoberg
MIT Press, 2021
Organised resistance to new fossil fuel infrastructure, pipelines, has become a formidable political force in North America. George Hoberg investigates activists’ strategy of blocking fossil fuel infrastructure, often in alliance with Indigenous groups, and examines the political and environmental outcomes of these actions.


by Michael Hannah
Cambridge University Press, 2021
The fossil record reveals periods when biodiversity exploded, and short intervals when much of life was wiped out in mass extinction events. Today’s biotic crisis isn’t yet a mass extinction, but parallels with ancient mass extinction events are profound and deeply worrying. We still have some time to avert disaster, but only if we act quickly.


by Romain Felli
Verso, 2021
For decades, neoliberal economists and ideologues have promoted adaptation to climate change, rather than combatting its causes, by advocating market-based “solutions”. Felli shows how powerful actors are thriving in the face of dangerous climate change and even making a profit out of it.


by Stephen J Pyne
University of California Press, 2021
Ancient relationships between humans and fire broke down when people began to burn fossil biomass and humanity’s firepower became unbounded. Fire-catalysed climate change globalised the impacts into a new geologic epoch. The Pleistocene yielded to the Pyrocene. We remade the Earth and now we must recover our responsibility as keepers of the planetary flame.


by Jonathan Neale
Resistance Books & The Ecologist, 2021
Many books discuss the politics of green new deals. This one concentrates on the nuts and bolts of the climate jobs that must be part of any solution for both the global South and North. Long-time British-based activist Neale sets out a clear and precise prescription, working methodically from basic principles to explain exactly what drives climate change, and moves systematically to social and political questions and how to build the mass movement we need.


Daniel Bertrand Monk & Michael Sorkin, editors
OR Books, 2021
For decades, Mike Davis has been the very model of an activist-scholar, a powerful chronicler, historian and analyst of catastrophe and revolution, of the complex dialectic between nature and society. The contributors to this volume build on and extend his work, refusing outdated political models and rejecting narratives of resignation.


by Christoph Hermann
Oxford University Press, 2021
Activists around the globe have challenged the commodification of water, education, health care and other essential goods. But what is commodification, and why is it a problem? Hermann goes beyond moral criticism to advance a materialist analysis that criticises commodification and proposes a new model for production that focuses on needs rather than profits.

[Reprinted from . Inclusion of a book does not imply endorsement.]

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