Geologic Life

aw_product_id: 
40891230815
merchant_image_url: 
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
28.99
book_author_name: 
Kathryn Yusoff
book_type: 
Paperback
publisher: 
Duke University Press
published_date: 
10/05/2024
isbn: 
9781478030300
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > Politics, Society & Education > Society & culture > Social groups > Ethnic studies
specifications: 
Kathryn Yusoff|Paperback|Duke University Press|10/05/2024
Merchant Product Id: 
9781478030300
Book Description: 
In Geologic Life, Kathryn Yusoff theorizes the processes by which race and racialization emerged geologically. Examining both the history of geology as a discipline and ongoing mineral and resource extraction, Yusoff locates forms of imperial geology embedded in Western and Enlightenment thought and highlights how it creates anti-Black, anti-Indigenous, and anti-Brown environmental and racial injustices. Throughout, she outlines how the disciplines of geology and geography—and their conventions: surveying, identifying, classifying, valuing, and extracting—established and perpetuated colonial practices that ordered the world and people along a racial axis. Examining the conceptualization of the inhuman as political, geophysical, and paleontological, Yusoff unearths an apartheid of materiality as distinct geospatial forms. This colonial practice of geology organized and underpinned racialized accounts of space and time in ways that materially made Anthropocene Earth. At the same time, Yusoff turns to Caribbean, Indigenous, and Black thought to chart a parallel geologic epistemology of the "earth-bound" that challenges what and who the humanities have chosen to overlook in its stories of the earth. By reconsidering the material epistemologies of the earth as an on-going geotrauma in colonial afterlives, Yusoff demonstrates that race is as much a geological formation as a biological one.

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