Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to Environmental Humanities
- The Cambridge Companion to Environmental Humanities
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Chapter 1 Introduction: Climate Change/Changing Climates
- Chapter 2 The Commons
- Chapter 3 Rights
- Chapter 4 Time as Kinship
- Chapter 5 The Nature of Gender
- Chapter 6 Race, Health, and Environment
- Chapter 7 Narrative and Environmental Innovation
- Chapter 8 Climate Fictions: Future-Making Technologies
- Chapter 9 Apocalypse/Extinction
- Chapter 10 Multispecies
- Chapter 11 Food
- Chapter 12 Plants
- Chapter 13 Extraction
- Chapter 14 Ice/Water/Vapor
- Chapter 15 Rocks
- Chapter 16 Coal/Oil
- Chapter 17 Waste
- Chapter 18 Ecomedia
- Chapter 19 New Materialism and the Nonhuman Story
- Chapter 20 Risk
- Chapter 21 Coda: Virus
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To Literature
- References
Chapter 12 - Plants
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 August 2021
- The Cambridge Companion to Environmental Humanities
- The Cambridge Companion to Environmental Humanities
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Chapter 1 Introduction: Climate Change/Changing Climates
- Chapter 2 The Commons
- Chapter 3 Rights
- Chapter 4 Time as Kinship
- Chapter 5 The Nature of Gender
- Chapter 6 Race, Health, and Environment
- Chapter 7 Narrative and Environmental Innovation
- Chapter 8 Climate Fictions: Future-Making Technologies
- Chapter 9 Apocalypse/Extinction
- Chapter 10 Multispecies
- Chapter 11 Food
- Chapter 12 Plants
- Chapter 13 Extraction
- Chapter 14 Ice/Water/Vapor
- Chapter 15 Rocks
- Chapter 16 Coal/Oil
- Chapter 17 Waste
- Chapter 18 Ecomedia
- Chapter 19 New Materialism and the Nonhuman Story
- Chapter 20 Risk
- Chapter 21 Coda: Virus
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To Literature
- References
Summary
Despite the critical role of plants in enabling all life on Earth, many people fail to recognize the importance of vegetal life ("plant blindness"). Further, most modern Eurowestern knowledges of plants tend to instrumentalize them, focusing on how plants are useful rather than on how they live their lives. The field of Critical Plant Studies (CPS) has recently emerged in the Humanities to challenge this situation; this chapter explores some of the central preoccupations of this body of work. Broadly speaking, CPS considers the histories and power dynamics involved in Eurowestern utilitarian relations with the vegetal world. In addition, borrowing from insights in the Natural Sciences and also from much older forms of plant knowledge, it considers plants as living organisms with their own forms of agency, being, and desire. These two threads are woven throughout the chapter, with the aim to demonstrate that plants are sophisticated and influential agents caught up in historical and ongoing forms of biopolitics, and that overcoming plant blindness means noticing not only what the plants are doing for us, but also how we are implicated in their unfolding lifeworlds.
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- The Cambridge Companion to Environmental Humanities , pp. 156 - 169Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
References
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