Staying with the Trouble

Staying with the Trouble

2016 • 304 pages

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Average rating4.7

15

In the midst of spiraling ecological devastation, multispecies feminist theorist Donna J. Haraway offers provocative new ways to reconfigure our relations to the earth and all its inhabitants. She eschews referring to our current epoch as the Anthropocene, preferring to conceptualize it as what she calls the Chthulucene, as it more aptly and fully describes our epoch as one in which the human and nonhuman are inextricably linked in tentacular practices. The Chthulucene, Haraway explains, requires sym-poiesis, or making-with, rather than auto-poiesis, or self-making. Learning to stay with the trouble of living and dying together on a damaged earth will prove more conducive to the kind of thinking that would provide the means to building more livable futures. Theoretically and methodologically driven by the signifier SF—string figures, science fact, science fiction, speculative feminism, speculative fabulation, so far—Staying with the Trouble further cements Haraway's reputation as one of the most daring and original thinkers of our time.

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Series

Series

13 released books

Experimental Futures

Experimental Futures is a 13-book series first released in 2008 with contributions by Christopher M. Kelty, Joseph Dumit, and Afsaneh Najmabadi.

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Professing Selves: Transsexuality and Same-Sex Desire in Contemporary Iran
Beautiful Data: A History of Vision and Reason since 1945
How Climate Change Comes to Matter: The Communal Life of Facts

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