sts anthro infrastructure climate more-than-human ontologies southeast asia. In Bangkok
Munira Khayyat
Postscript. What Tales will We Leave the Children of Tomorrow? Story-Trading across Southern Anthropocenes
Casper Bruun Jensen with Isabelle Stengers
Olga Ulturgasheva
22. How to Survive Medicine in the Anthropocene?
Gergely Mohácsi
Jennifer Eadie and Stephen Muecke
Part 6. Entangled Territories
Introduction
Kregg Hetherington
20. Under the Plastic Tarp: Memory and a Southern Anthropocene in California’s Pajaro Valley
Kathleen Cruz Gutierrez
Jiraporn Laocharoenwong
18. Artisans of the Plasticene: Polytanks and Plasticities in Urban Ghana
Brenda Chalfin with Alhassan Seidu
Asli Kemiksiz, Atsuro Morita and Émile St-Pierre
Part 5. More-than-Human Itineraries
Marisol de la Cadena
16. Street Feeding Stray Cats: A Multi-Species Cosmopolitics in Urban Indonesia
Fadjar Thufail
Juan Francisco Salazar
14. How to Construct a Time Machine: The Anthropocene in an Indigo Vat
Steven D. Brown, Marta Gasparin and Martin Quinn
Alyne Costa
Part 4. Speculations
Introduction
Didier Debaise
12. Decolonial Portals as Pedagogical Practice
Bea C. Rodriquez-Fransen, Victoria Desimoni and Iveta Silova
Introduction
Elaine Gan
9. To Forego: An Ethics for the Urban Anthropocene
Abdoumaliq Simone
10. Kinship in the Technosphere: From Ishimure Michiko’s Paradise in the Sea of Sorrow to Miyazaki Hayao’s Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
Yuki Masami
Tafadzwa Mushonga
7. Difference and Disobedience: Inhabiting the Southern Anthropocene
Niranjana R
8. The Plasticene and the Global South
Paul Jobin
Cristobal Bonelli
Part 2. Problems of Co-existence
Introduction
Mario Blaser
5. Wounded Lands, Resentful Mountains, and Mourning Maize: The Ecological Violence of War and Peace in Latin America
Daniel Ruiz-Serna
Rapti Siriwardane-de Zoysa
3. Diving into the Underwater Anthropocene: Vital Materiality and the Becoming of a Shipwreck
Jakkrit Sangkhamanee
Casper Bruun Jensen
Part 1.
Introduction: Emergent Interfaces
Marilyn Strathern
1. Welcome to the End of the World: Thinking beyond the Separation of Human and Geological Temporalities
Penelope Harvey
Reposted by Vanesa Castán Broto, Todd Campbell, Casper Bruun Jensen