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To rise to the increasingly urgent challenge of understanding the
relationship between human beings and the environment, scholars
need to step back and re-evaluate their basic premises about how
current explanations should shape the form and content of their
research. Against the Grain addresses a variety of topics in the
field of human ecology, including ecological anthropology,
evolutionary psychology, environmental history, and geography, and
challenges scholars to re-think the adequacy of their methods and
assumptions. Andrew P. Vayda concludes the volume with a critical
commentary on these issues and, more widely, on the subject of
explanation. The result is an extremely useful and provocative
prZcis for thinking about, re-evaluating, and rectifying scholarly
research.
To rise to the increasingly urgent challenge of understanding the
relationship between human beings and the environment, scholars
need to step back and re-evaluate their basic premises about how
current explanations should shape the form and content of their
research. Against the Grain addresses a variety of topics in the
field of human ecology, including ecological anthropology,
evolutionary psychology, environmental history, and geography, and
challenges scholars to re-think the adequacy of their methods and
assumptions. Andrew P. Vayda concludes the volume with a critical
commentary on these issues and, more widely, on the subject of
explanation. The result is an extremely useful and provocative
precis for thinking about, re-evaluating, and rectifying scholarly
research.
In an era when pressing environmental problems make collaboration
across the divide between sciences and arts and humanities
essential, this book presents the results of a collaborative
analysis by an anthropologist and a physicist of four key junctures
between science, society, and environment. The first focuses on the
systemic bias in science in favour of studying esoteric subjects as
distinct from the mundane subjects of everyday life; the second is
a study of the fire-climax grasslands of Southeast Asia, especially
those dominated by Imperata cylindrica (sword grass); the third
reworks the idea of 'moral economy', applying it to relations
between environment and society; and the fourth focuses on the
evolution of the global discourse of the culpability and
responsibility of climate change. The volume concludes with the
insights of an interdisciplinary perspective for the natural and
social science of sustainability. It argues that failures of
conservation and development must be viewed systemically, and that
mundane topics are no less complex than the more esoteric subjects
of science. The book addresses a current blind spot within the
academic research community to focusing attention on the seemingly
common and mundane beliefs and practices that ultimately play the
central role in the human interaction with the environment. This
book will benefit students and scholars from a number of different
academic disciplines, including conservation and environment
studies, development studies, studies of global environmental
change, anthropology, geography, sociology, politics, and science
and technology studies.
In an era when pressing environmental problems make collaboration
across the divide between sciences and arts and humanities
essential, this book presents the results of a collaborative
analysis by an anthropologist and a physicist of four key junctures
between science, society, and environment. The first focuses on the
systemic bias in science in favour of studying esoteric subjects as
distinct from the mundane subjects of everyday life; the second is
a study of the fire-climax grasslands of Southeast Asia, especially
those dominated by Imperata cylindrica (sword grass); the third
reworks the idea of 'moral economy', applying it to relations
between environment and society; and the fourth focuses on the
evolution of the global discourse of the culpability and
responsibility of climate change. The volume concludes with the
insights of an interdisciplinary perspective for the natural and
social science of sustainability. It argues that failures of
conservation and development must be viewed systemically, and that
mundane topics are no less complex than the more esoteric subjects
of science. The book addresses a current blind spot within the
academic research community to focusing attention on the seemingly
common and mundane beliefs and practices that ultimately play the
central role in the human interaction with the environment. This
book will benefit students and scholars from a number of different
academic disciplines, including conservation and environment
studies, development studies, studies of global environmental
change, anthropology, geography, sociology, politics, and science
and technology studies.
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