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The Memory We Could Be - by Daniel Macmillen Voskoboynik (Paperback)

The Memory We Could Be - by  Daniel Macmillen Voskoboynik (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 18.99 USD

Product Details

<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p><i>The Memory We Could Be</i> examines our relationship with nature and the unfolding climate crisis. It looks at how we got here, current impacts, and most importantly, how we can move away from fear and separation to build the memory of a more ecological and equitable world.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>Heal the great separation between humans and nature, and help create a future worth remembering.</b></p> <p><i>The Memory We Could Be</i> moves beyond the sterile, technical language around climate change and ecology to humanize the abstraction of global warming and bring different voices into the conversation.</p> <p>Drawing on sources from anthropology to hydrology, botany to economics, agronomy to astrobiology, medicine to oceanography, physics to history, the author weaves a lyrical and powerful story of our relationship with nature.</p> <p>The book has three parts: </p> <p>Past addresses memory. Our inability to comprehend our staggering present partly lies in our ignorance of our staggering past. We peer into the black box of history to understand how we got here. We go on a journey across the roots of our ecological crisis, from the Roman Empire to the forests of Burma, from Congolese rubber plantations, to Colombian oil fields.</p> <p>Present illustrates how climate change is shaping our world today, explores how it relates to poverties and inequalities, and equips readers with a set of intuitive instruments to understand climate impacts.</p> <p>Future looks at alternatives and strives to illustrate in human terms the world we could lose and the world we can win. It asks what we can do and develops a transformative vision of a more ecological and equitable economy.</p> <p><i>The Memory We Could Be</i> is vital reading for all of humanity.<p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br>Heal the great separation between humans and nature, and help create a future worth remembering <p>Will we head down a path of continued environmental degradation rendering the planet unlivable for future generations, or will we act in time to avert catastrophic climate change and environmental ruin?<br> -- Michael Mann, Distinguished Professor, Penn State University and co-author, <em>The Madhouse Effect </em></p> <p>Macmillen Voskoboynik is a hopeful realist--exactly the sort of storyteller and analyst we need at this fraught moment. <br> -- Richard Heinberg, author, <em>The End of Growth </em></p> <p><strong>UNSTOPPABLE </strong>climate change. Species extinction. The breakdown of ecosystems. Resource wars and mass displacements. Societal collapse. The common projections for our future feel too catastrophic to be plausible, too distant to be true, too complex to address. </p> <p>But ecology is the study of the complex connections that sustain life. By taking an ecological view, <em>The Memory We Could Be </em>links history with biology, economics with physics, to join the dots between our overlapping crises. It shows how our multiple, seemingly intractable problems, be they ecosystem collapse, damaged health, racial oppression, or gender injustice, have common roots but also common solutions. Unpacking our past gives us the tools now, in the present, to build a more just future, where competition and control give way for cooperation and care. </p> <p>Avoiding the sterile language that so often surrounds climate change, <em>The Memory We Could Be </em>seeks to inspire, illustrating in human terms the world we could lose and the world we can still win. This is vital reading for coming to grips with complexity and healing our separation from nature and each other. </p> <p>An exhilarating introduction to our ecological crisis, what caused it, and how we can imagine a better future. -- Jason Hickel, author, <em>The Divide: A Brief Guide to Global Inequality and its Solutions </em></p> <p><strong>DANIEL MACMILLEN VOSKOBOYNIK </strong>is a journalist, educator, and activist with writing in Pacific Standard, Open Democracy, and New Internationalist.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p><b>Daniel Macmillen Voskoboynik</b> is a young journalist and activist. His work has been published in Pacific Standard, Open Democracy, and New Internationalist. He is the co-founder and co-editor of www.worldat1C.org, a communications initiative designed to humanize the ecological crisis and clarify its causes.</p>

Price History

Good price! 5% below average

Cheapest price in the interval: 18.99 on November 8, 2021

Most expensive price in the interval: 21.99 on October 27, 2021

Average price in period: 19.99