The Shattered Earth: Histories of Climate, Catastrophe and the Wilderness edited by Mili Ghose

The Shattered Earth: Histories of Climate, Catastrophe and the Wilderness

EDITOR- Mili Ghose

HB
₹1750
POD
$59.95 . ₤49.95
PB
₹  . $  . ₤
e-Book
₹  . $ . ₤

 

   

INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR : Mili Ghose
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-5852-903-6
  • Year : 2024
  • Extent : 370
  • Discount available on checkout
  • Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.

Global climate change poses a genuine risk to the survival of the human species and raises questions regarding human existence on the planet. The Shattered Earth brings together the writings of scholars who investigate global and local questions related to critical environmental issues including global warming and anthropogenic climate change. If we look at the history of global climate change, we can discern the areas where humans have been responsible for disrupting the environment. Humans have already shattered the earth through their lust for power and profit, and have eliminated a number of species for the sake of industries, construction of roads, and for countless other commercial purposes which resulted in the loss of biodiversity. Examining diverse aspects in three sections, this volume deliberates on historical aspects, ecology, and the wild as well as catastrophes as markers of this climate change and its reverberations in planetary life.

The Editor
Mili Ghose was a Fellow at Maulana Azad Institute of Asian Studies, Kolkata and a University Grants Commission Fellow at Jadavpur University. After obtaining her PhD from the History Department of Jadavpur University, she is currently engaged in teaching there as a guest faculty. Her areas of interest include the environmental history of modern South Asia and the history of climate, disasters and cyclones. She has been a resource person in the Summer School on environmental history at Tsing Hua University, Beijing and has written several research papers and book chapters. Dr Ghose has also visited Japan and Bangladesh in connection with her ongoing research on cyclones and society in the east coast of India.