Russ D. Energy's History. Toward a Global Canon 2025
Загружено
2025-05-16 12:36:08 GMT
Размер
3.48 MiB (3652663 Bytes)
Количество файлов
1
Раздающие
29
Скачивающие
1
Хэш
E983ACF6E5FE0CA3AE2498B2DFC62375B7874BB4

Textbook in PDF format

Energy history is an approach to understanding the past that takes changes in the human exploitation of Earth's energies as its object of inquiry. This interdisciplinary field documents and analyzes how humans have thought about, harnessed, stored, and exploited stocks and flows of energy. In recent decades, in response to evidence of the effect of fossil fuel use in our climatic system and coinciding with an energy turn across the humanities, a new urgency and purpose has been ascribed to such work. Energy's History challenges abstract and universalizing conceptions of energy's history-making capacities. Each of the twelve essays in this collection presents, analyzes, and contextualizes a primary source. The contributors focus on ideas, events, and statements that recorded and critiqued the distinct historical paths of energy, thereby broadening the scope of where and what constitutes energy history. As energy's world-making has enmeshed ever more of the planet into a dangerous compact with fossil fuels, energy histories must be revised within this new energy-historical reality. This volume both presents persuasive visions of energy-driven development beyond the Western capitalist model and provides an expansive and critical account of the ways in which energy histories have shaped the past and impact the present. Introduction: Toward a Global Canon (by Daniela Russ and Thomas Turnbull). “The Largest and Most Important Renewable Energy Project in the World”: Maurilio Biagi Filho and the Brazilian Sugar Ethanol Industry (by Jennifer Eaglin). “Coal Will Be the Primary Fuel of the Future”: Yoshimura Manji on the “Fuel Question” (by Victor Seow). The Fear of Being “Left Behind in the Dust”: The Rise and Potential Fall of Coal in China (by Shellen X. Wu). Frederick Tryon and the Decoupling of Energy and Economic Growth in the 1920s (by Antoine Missemer). The Colony and the World Energy Revolution: Meghnad Saha’s Energetic Developmentalism (by Elizabeth Chatterjee). The Red Thread to Socialism: Gleb M. Krzhizhanovskii’s “Energetics and Socialist Reconstruction” (by Daniela Russ). Juan Pablo Perez Alfonzo and the Invention of Anticolonial Democratic Oil Conservation (by Michael Dobson and Giuliano Garavini). Privatizing a Colonial Electricity Undertaking: F. W. Dove’s “What People Think of Our Electric Light” (by Damilola Adebayo). Gender, Food, and Vernacular Energy in Moussa Travele’s “Three Rapid People” (by Laura Ann Twagira). Uncertain Energy Epistemologies: William James and the Case of Mental and Moral Energy (by Rebecca Wright). Laura Nader’s Third- Wave Energy Anthropology (by Thomas Turnbull). The Master Resource: Energy, Inter-Planetary Capitalism, and Neoliberal Cornucopianism (by Troy Vettese). Conclusion: Pluralistic Energy History in a Contested Epoch (by Daniela Russ and Thomas Turnbull)

Gomagnet 2023.
Данные взяты с Pirate Bay.