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The Climate Swerve: Mind, Hope and Survival - Book on Environmental Psychology & Climate Change Awareness | Perfect for Eco-Conscious Readers & Sustainability Advocates
The Climate Swerve: Mind, Hope and Survival - Book on Environmental Psychology & Climate Change Awareness | Perfect for Eco-Conscious Readers & Sustainability Advocates

The Climate Swerve: Mind, Hope and Survival - Book on Environmental Psychology & Climate Change Awareness | Perfect for Eco-Conscious Readers & Sustainability Advocates

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Description

Longlisted for the PEN America/E.O. Wilson Prize for Literary Science Writing "Well worth the read. . . . [A] prescient handoff to the next generation of scholars." ―The Washington PostFrom "one of the world’s foremost thinkers" (Bill Moyers), a profound, hopeful, and timely call for an emerging new collective consciousness to combat climate changeOver his long career as witness to an extreme twentieth century, National Book Award-winning psychiatrist, historian, and public intellectual Robert Jay Lifton has grappled with the profound effects of nuclear war, terrorism, and genocide. Now he shifts to climate change, which, Lifton writes, "presents us with what may be the most demanding and unique psychological task ever required of humankind," what he describes as the task of mobilizing our imaginative resources toward climate sanity.Thanks to the power of corporate-funded climate denialists and the fact that "with its slower, incremental sequence, [climate change] lends itself less to the apocalyptic drama," a large swathe of humanity has numbed themselves to the reality of climate change. Yet Lifton draws a message of hope from the Paris climate meeting of 2015 where representatives of virtually all nations joined in the recognition that we are a single species in deep trouble.Here, Lifton suggests in this lucid and moving book that recalls Rachel Carson and Jonathan Schell, was evidence of how we might call upon the human mind―"our greatest evolutionary asset"―to translate a growing species awareness―or "climate swerve"―into action to sustain our habitat and civilization.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
This is a powerful moral reflection on the predicament of climate change, which places the world-wide destruction of the earth in the context of nuclear proliferation and the complex trauma brought by it. Lifton writes as a psychiatrist with decades of experience documenting the trauma of war and nuclear technology in particular, and the beauty and moral clarity of the book derives from this acute understanding. He argues for a renewed "species awareness" and explores the extent to which there have been major shifts in social discourse and policy that should give us hope. The major benefit of the book is that it avoids abstraction and alarmism, and helps create a vocabulary for people (Americans in particular I think) to talk about what really matters. Its one limitation (in my view) is its commitment to the species awareness concept, which tends to sideline environmental justice and indigenous thought in preference for an abstract notion of humanity.
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