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Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene: The New Nature

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Nature has gone feral. How shall we re-attune ourselves to the new nature? A field guide can help. Field guides teach us how to notice, identify, name, and so better appreciate more-than-human worlds. They hone our powers of observation and teach us to see the world anew. Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene leads readers through a series of sites, observations, thought experiments, and genre-stretching descriptive practices to take stock of our current planetary crisis. Foregrounding nonhumans as world-changing historical actors, this book looks to nurture a revitalized natural history to address the profound challenges of our times. The Anthropocene is not only planetary, but it takes form, and gains momentum, within social and ecological patches. Field-based observations and place-based knowledge-cultivation―getting up-close and personal with patchy dynamics―are vital if we are to truly grapple with the ecological challenges and the historical conjunctures that are bringing us to multiple catastrophic tipping points. This field guide shifts attention away from knowledge-extractive practices of globalization to encourage skilled observers of many stripes to pursue their commitments to place, social justice, and multispecies community. It is through attention to the beings, places, ecologies, and histories of the Anthropocene that we can reignite curiosity, wonder, and care for our damaged planet.

344 pages, Hardcover

Published May 7, 2024

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About the author

Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing

24 books464 followers
Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing is Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She is the author of In the Realm of the Diamond Queen: Marginality in an Out-of-the-Way Place and coeditor of Uncertain Terms: Negotiating Gender in American Culture.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Eric Farnsworth.
Author 1 book2 followers
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February 28, 2025
Well.....

This is only just my opinion, and I'm certainly no expert, but this book didn't read like a field guide to me. It was more of an overview for a certain approach to understanding what we might see out in the world. But not much mention of how to collect those observations, and very few of the authors' own observations cited. More of a position paper or not quite manifesto. As noted above, the writing was very much in the academic style.

What is it about that academic style? So repetitious. So much effort to do something, but that something doesn't seem to be conveying information. Or maybe not the information that I'm interested in. More like they're speaking to the other people in their academic specialty group.

Let's just say that I was disappointed.

I'm not going to rate this book because I don't want to be more of a downer than I already am.

Sorry.
Profile Image for Sarah.
58 reviews
January 15, 2025
just incredible!!!! though admittedly very steeped in academic sentence structure, Field Guide to a Patchy Anthropocene is otherwise a fascinating read. it takes every way of collecting and understanding ecological history and successfully turns it on its head. i wouldve loved all the illustrations to be full color and full page but a girl can dream.

would recommend
Profile Image for Charlie.
75 reviews
September 3, 2025
An interesting exploration of the various forms of human-caused environmental changes other than the typical climate framing, like the way irrigation projects create the perfect habitats for invasive water hyacinth that choke waterways when naturally flowing water keeps them under control, or 'coffee rust' that thrives in monocrop coffee plantations and then breaks containment to devastate the surrounding ecologies, or algae blooms and comb jellies thriving from fertilizer runoff. lots of stories of humankind its own (and our non-human neighbors) worst problems through hubris and industrial scale agriculture, infrastructure, trade, etc. a bit dry and academic at times but a unique and essential perspective.

and the operative question explored here is: how do we map these? and they have some interesting concepts and approaches. it's a companion piece to a website the authors made called Feral Atlas which I haven't yet poked around on but certainly will.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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