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Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
Not in stock at Prospero.
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 22 September 2020
- ISBN 9780190696221
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages176 pages
- Size 152x231x15 mm
- Weight 295 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 23 39
Categories
Long description:
Growing directly out of the experiences of a team of Washington State University historians who designed a new foundational course for WSU's common requirements, the Roots of Contemporary Issues series is built on the premise that students will be better at facing current and future challenges, no matter their major or career path, if they are capable of addressing controversial and pressing issues in mature, reasoned ways using evidence, critical thinking, and clear written and oral communication skills.
To help students achieve these goals, each title in the Roots of Contemporary Issues series argues that today's problems are not simply the outcomes of yesterday's decisions: they are shaped by years, decades, and centuries of historical developments. Solving the central problems facing our world requires a deep historical understanding of the ways in which humans have been interconnected with faraway places for centuries.
Power Politics is centered around the premise that in order to generate real solutions to the problem of climate change, we must first understand how our relationship to the carbon-based fuels that drive global warming has unfolded over time.
By tracing the historical relationship between carbon energy and political ideas, institutions, motivations, and actions, Power Politics places readers in a better position to understand the entrenched nature of climate change denialism, capitalists' self-proclaimed ability to correct the problem, and the appeal of politically radical solutions to global warming. The book is organized into five chapters that move forward in time and offer selected case studies that illustrate how the pursuit of carbon energy and politics intersect and shape each other over time. The chapters track five key periods in the political history of carbon energy: the pre-industrial, the industrial revolution, the ages of empire and mass democracy, the Cold War and decolonization, and the late- and post- Cold War.
Some of us love history for its own sake, but for most students the contents of a college history course seem detached, unrelated to their lives, even meaningless. Yet we are surrounded by the legacy of history. Everything around us
Table of Contents:
List of Maps and Figures
About the Author
Acknowledgments
Series Introduction: Connecting the Past and Present
Introduction
Chapter 1. Energy and Politics Before the Carbon Age
Forests
Hydraulic Politics
Proto-Fossil China
English Coal
Chapter 2. Life in the Factory
Why Britain?
Slow Steam, Rushing Water
Coal Fire Spreads
Chapter 3. Carbon Democracy and its Limits
Carbon Energy and its Democratic Promise
The Limits of Carbon Democracy
Carbon Empires
Oil Violence in Revolutionary Mexico
Chapter 4. Cold War Carbon
The Cold War and Decolonization
Energy Recovery
Oil and Democracy in the Middle East
Chapter 5. The Politics of Energy Crisis
Posted Prices
Inventing an Energy Crisis
Neocolonial Carbon
Conclusion: Protest Energy
Index