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Pacific Climate Cultures

出版社
出版日期
2018/09/11
閱讀格式
EPUB
書籍分類
學科分類
ISBN
9783110635591

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Low-lying Pacific island nations are experiencing the frontline of sea-level rises and climate change and are responding creatively and making-sense in their own vernacular terms. Pacific Climate Cultures aims to bring Oceanic philosophies to the frontline of social science theorization. It explores the home-grown ways that 'climate change' becomes absorbed into the combined effects of globalization and into a living nexus of relations amongst human and non-humans, spirits and elements. Contributors to this edited volume explore diverse examples of living climate change—from floods and cyclones, through song and navigation, to new forms of art, community initiatives and cultural appropriations—and demonstrate their international relevance in understanding climate change. A Prelude by His Highness Tui Atua Efi and Afterword by Anne Salmond frame an Introduction by Tony Crook & Peter Rudiak-Gould and nine chapters by contributors including John Connell, Elfriede Hermann & Wolfgang Kempf and Cecilie Rubow. Endorsement from Professor Margaret Jolly, Australian National University: This exciting volume offers innovative insights on climate cultures across Oceania. It critically interrogates Western environmental sciences which fail to fully appreciate Oceanic knowledges and practices. It reveals how climate science can be both ‘a weapon of the weak’ and ‘an act of symbolic violence of the powerful’. A compelling series of studies in the Cook islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Papua New Guinea and Samoa suggest not diverse cultural constructions of ‘natural facts’ but processes of knowledge exchange and at best a respectful reciprocity in confronting present challenges and disturbing future scenarios. ’Home-grown’ Pacific discourses and ways of living emphasise the interconnections of all life on earth and in our cosmos; they do not differentiate between the natural and the moral, between environmental and cultural transformations. These studies evoke the creative agency of Oceanic peoples, too often seen as on the vanguard of victimhood in global representations of climate change, and offer distinctive visions for all humanity in these troubling times.
  • Cover
  • Half-Title
  • Titlepage
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • His Highness Tui Atua Tupua Tamasese Ta’isi Efi
  • Prelude: Climate Change and the Perspective of the Fish
  • Tony Crook, Peter Rudiak-Gould
  • 1 Introduction: Pacific Climate Cultures
    • 1.1 Living Climate Change in Oceania
    • 1.2 Discourses of Climate Change in the Pacific
    • 1.3 Pacific Climate Cultures
  • Elfriede Hermann, Wolfgang Kempf
  • 2 “Prophecy from the Past”: Climate Change Discourse, Song Culture and Emotions in Kiribati
    • 2.1 Introduction
    • 2.2 Song Culture in Kiribati
    • 2.3 Emotions in the Face of Climate Change Discourse in Kiribati
    • 2.4 The Song “Koburake!”
    • 2.5 Anticipation and Emotions
    • 2.6 Conclusion
  • Cecilie Rubow
  • 3 Woosh—Cyclones as Culturalnatural Whirls: The Receptions of Climate Change in the Cook Islands
    • 3.1 Stormy Weather
    • 3.2 Climate Change Whirls
    • 3.3 A Double Cyclogenesis
    • 3.4 The Cyclones Multiple
    • 3.5 Climate Projections and New Futures
  • Maria Louise Bønnelykke Robertson
  • 4 Crafting Certainty in Liquid Worlds: Encountering Climate Change in Kiribati
    • 4.1 Introduction
    • 4.2 The Reception of Climate Change in Kiribati
    • 4.3 The Navigator: Skills for Reading the Weather
    • 4.4 If You Are Going to Be a Traveller…
    • 4.5 Crafting Futures: The Certainty of Navigation
    • 4.6 Concluding Remarks
  • Emilie Nolet
  • 5 A Tsunami from the Mountains: Interpreting the Nadi Flood
    • 5.1 Introduction: “A Tsunami from the Mountains”
    • 5.2 Explaining the Floods
    • 5.3 Coping with Flood Risks
    • 5.4 Conclusion
  • John Connell
  • 6 Nothing There Atoll? “Farewell to the Carteret Islands”
    • 6.1 Introduction
    • 6.2 (Mis)representing the Islands?
    • 6.3 Thinking About Sinking
    • 6.4 The Carteret Islands: A Recent History
    • 6.5 Inside the Garbage Can
    • 6.6 Conclusion: 2015 and All That
  • Jennifer Newell
  • 7 Weathering Climate Change in Samoa: Cultural Resources for Resilience
    • 7.1 Sources of Resilience
    • 7.2 “Nothing New”: A Tradition of Adaptability
    • 7.3 It is Not ‘I’ but ‘We’
    • 7.4 A Higher Power
    • 7.5 Skilled Voyagers, Rooted to Place
    • 7.6 On Family Land
    • 7.7 Managing the Tangible World
    • 7.8 Undermining the Fale Pillars
    • 7.9 Climate Change as a Cultural Resource
    • 7.10 Conclusion
  • Marion Struck-Garbe
  • 8 Reflections on Climate Change by Contemporary Artists in Papua New Guinea
    • 8.1 Introduction
    • 8.2 Climate Change in Papua New Guinea
    • 8.3 Sinking Islands
    • 8.4 Displacement and Resettlement
    • 8.5 Coral Bleaching and Overfishing
    • 8.6 Deforestation
    • 8.7 Pacific Islands and the Global Challenge
  • Joeli Veitayaki, Elisabeth Holland
  • 9 Lessons from Lomani Gau Project, Fiji: A Local Community’s Response to Climate Change
    • 9.1 Introduction
    • 9.2 Gau Island: The Setting
    • 9.3 The Engagement Process
    • 9.4 The Accomplishments
    • 9.5 The Challenges
    • 9.6 The Lessons Learned and Way Forward
  • Nalau Bingeding
  • 10 Papua New Guinea’s Response to Climate Change: Challenges and Ways Forward
    • 10.1 Introduction
    • 10.2 Challenges and Ways Forward
      • 10.2.1 Adaptation Issues are Sidelined
      • 10.2.2 Climate Change Efforts Lack Coordination
      • 10.2.3 Key Climate Change Documents are Biased and Ineffective
      • 10.2.4 Participation in International Negotiations Fails to Deliver Results
      • 10.2.5 REDD Projects Fail to Achieve Additionality
      • 10.2.6 Subsistence Agriculture Complicates REDD Efforts
      • 10.2.7 Logging Concessions May Not Generate Significant REDD Credits
      • 10.2.8 Stakeholders Lack Interest in Forest Plantation Development
      • 10.2.9 The Role of Conservation under REDD Is Underappreciated
      • 10.2.10 Payment for Ecosystem Services
      • 10.2.11 Lack of Will to Reduce the Adverse Impact of Mining on Terrestrial and Marine Environments
      • 10.2.12 Lack of Vision to Reduce Fossil Fuel Emissions and Develop Clean, Renewable Energy
    • 10.3 Key Points and Conclusions
  • Dame Anne Salmond
  • Afterword
    • Think Like a Fish: Pacific Philosophies and Climate Change
  • Bibliography
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • Index
  • Back Cover
  • 出版地 德國
  • 語言 德文

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