Visionary essays from a founder of the modern ecology movement.
In this collection of essays, Murray Bookchin’s vision for an ecological society remains central as he addresses questions of urbanism and city planning, technology, self-management, energy, utopianism, and more. Throughout, he opposes efforts to reduce ecology to a toothless “environmentalism, ” a task as vital today as when these essays were first published. Written between 1969 and 1979, the essays in this collection represent a fascinating and fertile period in Bookchin’s life. Coming out of the unfulfilled promise of the sixties and trying to develop a revolutionary critique of social life that avoided the pitfalls of Marxism, he was entering his creative intellectual peak. He was laying the foundations of a truly social ecology: a society based on decentralization, interdependence, democratic self-management, mutual aid, and solidarity. Presented with clarity and fervor, these key works contain the kernels of concerns that would occupy him until his death in 2006. This edition also includes a new foreword by Dan Chodorkoff, someone who was with Bookchin at the founding of his Institute for Social Ecology and who understand his work better than anyone.
表中的内容
Introduction
The Power to Create, The Power to Destroy
Toward an Ecological Society
An open letter to the Ecological Movement
Energy, “Ecotechnocracy” and Ecology
The Concept of Ecotechnologies and Ecocommunities
Self-Management and the New Technology
The Myth of City Planning
Toward a Vision of the Urban Future
Marxism as Bourgeois Sociology
On Neo-Marxism, Bureaucracy, and the Body Politic
On Spontaneity and Organisation
Conclusion: Utopianism and Futurism
Appendix: Andre Gorz Rides Again — or Politics as Environmentalism
Acknowledgements
关于作者
Dan Chodorkoff is a writer and educator who co-founded The Institute for Social Ecology with Murray Bookchin. He received his Ph D in cultural anthropology from the New School for Social Research, and he is the author of numerous books, including The Anthropology of Utopia: Essays on Social Ecology and Community Development and the 2022 novel Sugaring Down. He received a Wenner-Gren Foundation Grant for anthropological research, and in 2015 was awarded the Goddard College Presidential Award for Activism.