Planet Work: Rethinking Labor and Leisure in the Anthropocene ed. by Ryan Hediger (review)

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Jennifer Forsberg
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In particular, much of <strong>[End Page 385]</strong> the defining premise of the volume is to identify the role of labor, an action distinct from work, to construct a nexus of enriched narratives that plot the epochal confluence of capitalism, neoliberalism, extractionist practices, and climate change. Editor Ryan Hediger widely addresses this constellation of social, economic, biological, and ecological issues as \"modern environmental trauma\" (2). The studies that exemplify this trauma span time and space, ranging from harnessing fire in David Rodland's elemental analysis to hypercontemporary contexts surrounding COVID-19.</p> <p>The three-part collection starts with the section \"Questioning 'Anthropocene' Frames,\" which rehearses debated timelines, human and nonhuman labor practices, and the onset of industrial technology. This helpful literature review dramatizes the scholarly debates of the Anthropocene and aims to construct a foundation for the remainder of the volume.</p> <p>These foundations are destabilized in section two, \"Rethinking Work in the Anthropocene,\" with essays that close-read roughly two hundred years' examinations of work situations, including democracy in the \"slaveryocene\" (Hediger 73); the centrality of horses in the English novel (Akilli); the rhetoric of freedom in postbellum agricultural debates (Clausen); and the laboring trope of coming of age in postmodern fiction (Wanat). Especially insightful is James Armstrong's \"The Work of the Globe,\" which provides perceptive contrasts between space-age advancement and the erasure of laboring human populations in the display of the Unisphere at the 1964–65 World's Fair.</p> <p>Section three, \"Learning from Leisure in the Anthropocene,\" hosts the most impactful essays of the collection, offering careful close reading, theoretical cross-examination, and cultural study that account for narrative practices, social engagement, and the specialization of marketplaces alongside the contested labor/leisure binary. One highlight is Jennifer K. Ladino's poignant essay about the National Park Service that examines the \"emotional labor\" of rangers in the National Park Service (187). Ladino identifies the homogeneity of conservationist visibility in the marketplace—à la Ken Burns—alongside the growing diversity of contemporary rangers who embrace stewardship amid a precarious, neoliberal economy. <strong>[End Page 386]</strong> Ladino aptly points to \"rangering as a particularly relational kind of work, a labor that refuses to participate in capitalism-as-usual\" and identifies the role of human work in planet-based care (193), a position some of this collection's authors advance as a futile endeavor. This \"framework of care\" (126) is interrogated further in Will Elliot and Kevin Maier's examination of skiing and the climate-centric perspective that winter recreation provides studies of the Anthropocene. Elliot and Maier argue that the solitary and stark symbol of snow advances historical and social understandings of environmentalism and that skiing's complicated capitalist roots contribute to the embodied importance of <em>play</em> in nature as a site for activist reframing.</p> <p>To its benefit, <em>Planet Work</em> spans a bevy of topics for academic research, including colonial and postcolonial practices, the intersectional confluence of working bodies, and a frequent reference to haunting and trauma related to \"modern\" technologies. These trends help to diagnose disrupted, relational ecologies between humans and nonhumans across the social, cultural, biological, and technological spheres that comprise the Anthropocene field of study.</p> <p>However, in casting such a wide net, the volume can read as discontiguous and forced, offering only a few essays that complement sustained discussions. Additionally, the broad reach of the collection's scope meant that each author needed to advance the boundaries of their work, which resulted in making empty academic gestures rather than content- and audience-focused development. Most jolting was the alienating use of \"we\" across largely uninviting scholarship, notably in the gatekeeping advanced by the coda. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Planet Work: Rethinking Labor and Leisure in the Anthropocene ed. by Ryan Hediger
  • Jennifer Forsberg
Ryan Hediger, ed., Planet Work: Rethinking Labor and Leisure in the Anthropocene. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell UP, 2023. 284 pp. Hardcover, $130; paper, $39.95; e-book, $39.95.

The essays that comprise Planet Work sketch out an array of concerns surrounding the definition of the "Anthropocene" and provide self-aware scholarship that accounts for all that might—or might not—be included within that term. In particular, much of [End Page 385] the defining premise of the volume is to identify the role of labor, an action distinct from work, to construct a nexus of enriched narratives that plot the epochal confluence of capitalism, neoliberalism, extractionist practices, and climate change. Editor Ryan Hediger widely addresses this constellation of social, economic, biological, and ecological issues as "modern environmental trauma" (2). The studies that exemplify this trauma span time and space, ranging from harnessing fire in David Rodland's elemental analysis to hypercontemporary contexts surrounding COVID-19.

The three-part collection starts with the section "Questioning 'Anthropocene' Frames," which rehearses debated timelines, human and nonhuman labor practices, and the onset of industrial technology. This helpful literature review dramatizes the scholarly debates of the Anthropocene and aims to construct a foundation for the remainder of the volume.

These foundations are destabilized in section two, "Rethinking Work in the Anthropocene," with essays that close-read roughly two hundred years' examinations of work situations, including democracy in the "slaveryocene" (Hediger 73); the centrality of horses in the English novel (Akilli); the rhetoric of freedom in postbellum agricultural debates (Clausen); and the laboring trope of coming of age in postmodern fiction (Wanat). Especially insightful is James Armstrong's "The Work of the Globe," which provides perceptive contrasts between space-age advancement and the erasure of laboring human populations in the display of the Unisphere at the 1964–65 World's Fair.

Section three, "Learning from Leisure in the Anthropocene," hosts the most impactful essays of the collection, offering careful close reading, theoretical cross-examination, and cultural study that account for narrative practices, social engagement, and the specialization of marketplaces alongside the contested labor/leisure binary. One highlight is Jennifer K. Ladino's poignant essay about the National Park Service that examines the "emotional labor" of rangers in the National Park Service (187). Ladino identifies the homogeneity of conservationist visibility in the marketplace—à la Ken Burns—alongside the growing diversity of contemporary rangers who embrace stewardship amid a precarious, neoliberal economy. [End Page 386] Ladino aptly points to "rangering as a particularly relational kind of work, a labor that refuses to participate in capitalism-as-usual" and identifies the role of human work in planet-based care (193), a position some of this collection's authors advance as a futile endeavor. This "framework of care" (126) is interrogated further in Will Elliot and Kevin Maier's examination of skiing and the climate-centric perspective that winter recreation provides studies of the Anthropocene. Elliot and Maier argue that the solitary and stark symbol of snow advances historical and social understandings of environmentalism and that skiing's complicated capitalist roots contribute to the embodied importance of play in nature as a site for activist reframing.

To its benefit, Planet Work spans a bevy of topics for academic research, including colonial and postcolonial practices, the intersectional confluence of working bodies, and a frequent reference to haunting and trauma related to "modern" technologies. These trends help to diagnose disrupted, relational ecologies between humans and nonhumans across the social, cultural, biological, and technological spheres that comprise the Anthropocene field of study.

However, in casting such a wide net, the volume can read as discontiguous and forced, offering only a few essays that complement sustained discussions. Additionally, the broad reach of the collection's scope meant that each author needed to advance the boundaries of their work, which resulted in making empty academic gestures rather than content- and audience-focused development. Most jolting was the alienating use of "we" across largely uninviting scholarship, notably in the gatekeeping advanced by the coda. To this end, more collaborative scholarship from within work-related fields such as labor studies...

星球工作:人类世的劳动与休闲反思》,Ryan Hediger 编(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: Planet Work:由 Ryan Hediger 编辑 Jennifer Forsberg Ryan Hediger, ed., Planet Work:反思人类世的劳动与休闲》。宾夕法尼亚州路易斯堡:Bucknell UP, 2023.284 pp.精装,130 美元;纸质,39.95 美元;电子书,39.95 美元。组成《星球工作》的文章概述了围绕 "人类世 "定义的一系列问题,并提供了具有自我意识的学术研究,说明了该术语可能包含或可能不包含的所有内容。特别是,本卷的大部分 [完 第 385 页] 定义前提是确定劳动(一种有别于工作的行为)的作用,以构建一个丰富叙事的纽带,描绘资本主义、新自由主义、榨取主义实践和气候变化的划时代交汇。编辑 Ryan Hediger 将这一社会、经济、生物和生态问题的组合称为 "现代环境创伤"(2)。体现这种创伤的研究跨越了时间和空间,从戴维-罗德兰(David Rodland)的元素分析中对火的利用,到围绕 COVID-19 的超当代背景。这本由三部分组成的文集以 "质疑'人类世'的框架 "为开篇,对争论不休的时间线、人类和非人类的劳动实践以及工业技术的兴起进行了重新演绎。这篇有用的文献综述将 "人类世 "的学术争论演绎得淋漓尽致,旨在为本集的其余部分奠定基础。这些基础在第二部分 "反思人类世中的工作 "中被颠覆,这些文章对大约两百年来的工作状况进行了细读,包括 "奴隶世 "中的民主(Hediger 73);马在英国小说中的中心地位(Akilli);后贝伦农业辩论中的自由修辞(Clausen);以及后现代小说中成年的劳动特例(Wanat)。詹姆斯-阿姆斯特朗(James Armstrong)的 "地球仪的工作 "一文尤其具有洞察力,该文对太空时代的进步与 1964-65 年世界博览会上展示的地球仪中对劳动人口的抹杀进行了敏锐的对比。第三部分 "从人类世的休闲中学习 "是本文集中最有影响力的文章,通过仔细阅读、理论交叉检验和文化研究,对叙事实践、社会参与和市场专业化与有争议的劳动/休闲二元论进行了阐述。珍妮弗-K.-拉迪诺(Jennifer K. Ladino)关于国家公园管理局的文章颇具感染力,探讨了国家公园管理局护林员的 "情感劳动"(187 页)。拉迪诺指出了保护主义者在市场中的同质性--就像肯-伯恩斯(Ken Burns)那样--以及当代护林员日益增长的多样性,他们在岌岌可危的新自由主义经济中接受管理。[拉迪诺恰如其分地指出,"护林是一种特别具有关系性的工作,是一种拒绝参与资本主义惯常做法的劳动",并指出了人类工作在以地球为基础的关爱中的作用(193),而本文集的一些作者却认为这是一种徒劳无益的努力。威尔-埃利奥特(Will Elliot)和凯文-迈尔(Kevin Maier)对滑雪和冬季娱乐为人类世研究提供的以气候为中心的视角进行了研究,进一步探讨了这一 "关爱框架"(126)。埃利奥特和迈尔认为,雪这种孤独而鲜明的象征推进了对环保主义的历史和社会理解,而滑雪复杂的资本主义根源则有助于体现在大自然中玩耍的重要性,使其成为活动家重新思考的场所。对《星球工作》有利的是,它跨越了众多学术研究主题,包括殖民和后殖民实践、工作身体的交叉融合,以及经常提到的与 "现代 "技术有关的困扰和创伤。这些趋势有助于诊断人类世研究领域的社会、文化、生物和技术领域中人类与非人类之间被破坏的关系生态。然而,由于网撒得太广,这本文集读起来可能会显得不连贯和勉强,只有几篇文章对持续的讨论起到了补充作用。此外,该文集范围之广,意味着每位作者都需要推进其工作的边界,这导致了空洞的学术姿态,而不是以内容和受众为中心的发展。最令人震惊的是,"我们 "一词的使用在很大程度上疏远了学术研究,尤其是在尾声的把关中。为此,在与工作相关的领域,如劳动研究领域,应开展更多的合作性学术研究......
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来源期刊
Western American Literature
Western American Literature LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
50.00%
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