{"id":45944,"date":"2025-08-05T18:36:14","date_gmt":"2025-08-05T18:36:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/45944\/"},"modified":"2025-08-05T18:36:14","modified_gmt":"2025-08-05T18:36:14","slug":"apocalypse-24-7-roy-scranton","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/45944\/","title":{"rendered":"Apocalypse 24\/7 | Roy Scranton"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The peculiar character of our current impasse is that it is at once unprecedented, obscure, and banal as the weather. We face not a day of reckoning, but Apocalypse 24\/7. Not a doomsday you can prep for, hack your way out of, or hide from, but your world dissolving around you. Not something with a beginning and end, but the prelude of a new form of life to come, which those of us alive today will never live to see: a promised land not of milk and honey but fire and flood, veiled in ashes and dust, more felt than seen. From an ecological perspective, we have created a new habitat less hospitable to the large bipedal primate we call Homo sapiens. On the ontological level, we have crossed a threshold into a new environing gestalt yet to coalesce, a new world not yet visible from where we stand. From an existential point of view, we face an impasse we cannot see through or beyond. It\u2019s not too much to say that the end of the world is at this point a given and that the question we face is what sort of world comes next, but as with the world we\u2019re born into, what world comes after we\u2019re gone is not something we get to choose. Our struggle is at once more direct and more obscure: how to live out our end.<\/p>\n<p>In their book The Ends of the World, philosopher D\u00e9borah Danowski and anthropologist Eduardo Viveiros de Castro explore the ontological and metaphysical implications that emerge from contemporary discourses of the end. Among their numerous insights and observations, they make the point that the end of the world brings \u201cthe world\u201d into sight in a new way. By pondering the failure and dissolution of our lifeworld, that is, we see the world anew, as a whole, and can construct a plausible fiction of its beginning, middle, and end. The denouement gives narrative shape to what came before. They write: \u201cThe end of the world, then. Let us start from the \u2018end.\u2019 The formula places us in a paradoxical situation. . . . In a double movement, it drags us in two opposing directions, toward a past and a future that are equally double, each with an \u2018empirical\u2019 and a \u201ctranscendental\u201d face.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps it is just this double movement that explains why disputes about the origins of our contemporary world so often take form around neologisms denominating the future, as with the tired controversy about whether the era in which we live should be called the Anthropocene, the Chthulucene, the Gynecene, the Plantationocene, the Capitalocene, the Trumpocene, or something else entirely. How are we to make sense of these labels except as desperate attempts to constrain the incomprehensibly complex disarrangement of modern temporality and disguise it as a recognizable problem with a recognizable solution, even when, as in the case of Haraway\u2019s Chthulucene, it gestures toward the incomprehensibility it occludes? We may quibble about where and when this world began, which is one way of having the argument about what this world is, but whatever we call it, we must distinguish this world from all the others that have come and gone.<\/p>\n<p>We can hardly make sense of the idea of the end of the world without attending to all the other worlds that ended before our own.<\/p>\n<p>Common usage of the term world confuses, and it\u2019s important to distinguish, following Dipesh Chakrabarty, at least four different ways of talking about our relationship with the spinning rock on which our species\u2019 life depends. When we say \u201cthe world\u201d we typically mean the human world, our world, the world as we know it, the collectively imagined global chronotope of the present. This sense of \u201cworld\u201d is not an objective description but a subjective one, denoting a matrix of space, time, and meaning inhabited by the beings with and through whom it exists. Our world is the world in which we live, a world that would be unimaginable without us. A \u201cworld without us\u201d\u2014a world without humans, that is\u2014would be no world at all.<\/p>\n<p>But our world is also a planet, a globe, and the Earth. We might say, somewhat reductively and with due respect to Chakrabarty\u2019s finely textured analysis, that the globe is political, the planet scientific, the Earth phenomenological, and the world ontological. Thus when we talk about \u201cthe end of the world,\u201d we speak almost exclusively in an ontological register. The globe is a spatial conceptualization, not a temporal one, and can only be said to \u201cend\u201d where political collectives no longer have reach\u2014at one time the blank edges of the map marked \u201cHere Be Dragons,\u201d now maybe somewhere between the magnetosphere and the moon. The planet on which the globe is mapped has limits, too, spatially at the K\u00e1rm\u00e1n line beyond the exosphere, temporally some five or six billion years hence, when it will be vaporized by the cooling and expanding sun.<\/p>\n<p>The Earth, in contrast, has no end. Our ecological entanglement with the thin layer of the biosphere, being a phenomenological affair\u2014as Heidegger put it, \u201cthe serving bearer, blossoming and fruiting, spreading out in rock and water, rising up into plant and animal\u201d dwelling-ground of Man\u2014exists as long as does that being for whom the environing phenomena exists, which is to say as long as there are people dwelling in it. We are Earthlings, as Bruno Latour has argued, in some sense perhaps inescapably Earthbound, despite our adventures in the vacuum of space. Only the ontological world, which is to say the socially constructed world, existing through human culture in time, can truly be said to come to an end for us in any meaningful way.<\/p>\n<p>And what does it mean for something to end? To end is to finish, to come to completion, to cease, to no longer exist in the same form. Physics tells us that while mass and energy change into each other, nothing is ever lost, so from a cosmic point of view, to end means merely to change. But we do not live our lives from a cosmic point of view: we live in mortal bodies, among mortal bodies, forced to contend with the mystery of death, which is almost certainly our profoundest sense of the end of anything. We might even say that \u201cthe end,\u201d any end, is a metaphor for our own, as Frank Kermode argues in his book The Sense of an Ending.<\/p>\n<p>So what could it possibly mean to say \u201cthe world is ending?\u201d For Kermode, steeped in medieval apocalypticism and Wallace Stevens, such a proposition is not so much an attempt to describe reality as it is an aesthetic effort to establish a \u201cfictive concord\u201d between one\u2019s own mortality and some larger pattern of existence\u2014an attempt, we might say, to feel a little less lonely about dying. We could push Kermode\u2019s subjectivism further and argue that the claim that \u201cthe world is ending\u201d is no more than a narcissistic projection of one\u2019s own despair on a planet-sized screen. Yet such an interpretation feels hopelessly inadequate to a moment when the end of civilization as we know it seems all too plausible. If we want to make sense of the proposition that \u201cthe world is ending\u201d as a statement about reality, we must reckon with what it would mean for \u201cthe world\u201d to \u201cend.\u201d If we take \u201cthe end\u201d as a euphemism for \u201cdeath,\u201d then we could take \u201cthe end of the world\u201d to mean human extinction or at least significant mass death. If we take a more nuanced view, \u201cthe end of the world\u201d might indicate nothing more or less than the transmutation of our collectively constituted sense of the present: a \u201cnew world,\u201d a new now, a different collective sense of being.<\/p>\n<p>The end of the world is a fiction insofar as it\u2019s a judgment in the form of a narrative, constructed with symbols and synthesized from experience, emotion, and sense data. It expresses, as Kermode would say, a concordance between the speaker\u2019s transient being in the present and their sense of participating in a larger pattern, overlapping with any number of historical, geological, and religious stories about the past, and stamped today with the image of the planet, the \u201cpale blue dot\u201d we know so well from pictures, the globe whirling on its brass spindle. Which is to say that a being and its world are forever wrapped up in each other: \u201cThere is no person without a world,\u201d and there is conversely no world without a person. A world exists insofar as someone gives it life, even if only in their imagination.<\/p>\n<p>My \u201cworld\u201d differs from yours, yours from Nancy Pelosi\u2019s, and Pelosi\u2019s from that of a twenty-seven-year-old Bangladeshi lab tech. Nevertheless and despite what are likely significant differences between each person\u2019s sense of their \u201cworld,\u201d \u201cthe world\u201d also points to something at least notionally shared by every living human being, a mutually constructed and concurrent coexistence happening within recognizable bounds. No one says \u201cthe world\u201d to mean Neptune or the Incan Empire. One might say \u201cthe world\u201d to mean specifically the planet Earth but only within a shared understanding of planetary history: what a dogmatic Creationist means by \u201cthe world\u201d will differ from what a Gaia-worshipping neopagan means by the same phrase.<\/p>\n<p>My point is that as much as the end of the world is a fiction, it is also the end of a fiction, or rather the end of fiction as such: in the individual case, the narrative of a life; in a collective sense, the weave of narrative, concepts, metaphysics, and myth that gives shape and meaning to reality. The \u201cend of the world\u201d signifies the conclusion of a story and in its determinateness indexes the empty possibility outside and beyond narrative. As much as the end of our world allows us to conceive of that world as a discrete whole, it also forces us to see it as a monad in the void\u2014as one transient world among many. Thus we can hardly make sense of the idea of the end of the world without attending to all the other worlds that ended before our own. <\/p>\n<p>The worlds of various paleolithic hunter-gatherer, fisherfolk, and cultivator tribes ended with the emergence of imperial cities and large-scale organized agriculture. So, too, ended the preliterate world of the eastern Mediterranean brought to life in Homer\u2019s Iliad, long before Plato was himself witness to the end of the world that followed Homer\u2019s, as literacy transformed Greek conceptions of meaning and being. The world of Laozi and Confucius ended with the tenth-century collapse of the Tang dynasty. Countless worlds were destroyed forever through the so-called Columbian Exchange, including the feudal world of medieval European Apocalypticism. The world of the Umayyad Caliphate, the Zoroastrian world, the Aboriginal world, Chaco World, the world of the Tokugawa shogunate, the Mayan world, even the patriarchal, Eurocentric world of donnish sophistication in which Frank Kermode felt so at home\u2014all these worlds are gone, even as they live on in the ruins of the past and the inherited lineaments of the present.<\/p>\n<p>Thus although our impasse is unprecedented in scope and consequences, it is not without historical analogue. This is not the first time the world has ended, nor the first time a people or culture has had to deal with the collapse of its lifeworld and the loss of its concepts. Human culture has recorded and pondered such catastrophes again and again.<\/p>\n<p>The conquest of the Americas, in which countless worlds were destroyed forever, stands out with particular salience. Pursuing this insight, many look to Traditional Ecological Knowledge, indigenous epistemologies, or practices of decolonization as sources of salvific potential in the face of our impasse. As Aboriginal scholar Tyson Yunkaporta writes in his book Sand Talk, \u201cPerhaps we need to revisit the brilliant thought-paths of our Paleolithic Ancestors and recover enough cognitive function to correct the impossible messes civilization has created.\u201d Building on the work of Walter Mignolo, British geographer Mark Jackson argues that decolonial critique, \u201cepistemic disobedience,\u201d and \u201cborder gnosis\u201d grounded in indigenous knowledge can open a liberatory cultural politics focused on \u201ccare, attention to flourishing, and . . . disobedience to hegemony.\u201d Perhaps the most popular version of this argument comes from biologist Robin Wall Kimmerer in her evocative book Braiding Sweetgrass, which assures us that by \u201cbecoming indigenous\u201d and \u201clearning the grammar of animacy,\u201d we may \u201cchoose the green path,\u201d defeat the \u201cWindigo\u201d of extractive capitalism, and come to live in sustainable reciprocity with nature.<\/p>\n<p>In the face of gross injustice, ecological catastrophe, and civilizational collapse, there is a powerful appeal in returning to indigenous ways of knowing.<\/p>\n<p>The terms deployed here are complex, used in sometimes contradictory or controversial ways, and rarely clearly defined. Fikret Berkes offers one definition of Traditional Ecological Knowledge as \u201ca cumulative body of knowledge, belief, and practice . . . handed down through generations through traditional songs, stories and beliefs\u201d that is \u201cconcerned with the relationship of living beings (including human) with their traditional groups and with their environment.\u201d Yet as Kyle Whyte points out, \u201ca scan of environmental science and policy literatures reveals there to be sufficiently large differences in definitions of TEK\u201d as to \u201cobstruct the possibility of moving toward a consensus on the best definition.\u201d One problem anthropologist Joseph Gone and others have identified is that the concept of indigenous epistemology gathers distinctly different cultures under a single broad category, Indigenous, defined primarily in its opposition to another broad category, variously invoked as White, European, American, Colonial, or Western, and begs important questions about how we might identify indigeneity on its own terms, how and whether indigenous epistemologies survive colonization and the imposition of literacy, and how to understand the relations of so-called indigenous peoples to non-European civilizing conquerors from southeast Asia to Islamized Africa to the Aztec Empire.<\/p>\n<p>In the face of gross injustice, ecological catastrophe, and civilizational collapse, there is a powerful appeal in returning to indigenous ways of knowing. Such arguments align with those of other thinkers, such as anthropologists James Scott, David Graeber, and David Wengrow, ecologist Paul Shepard, philosopher John Zerzan, and writers Paul Kingsnorth and Dougald Hine, all of whom assert in their different ways that modern humanity lives in a fallen state and that prelapsarian human life was qualitatively better, more sustainable, and more spiritually whole. Some, like Kingsnorth, tend to see humanity\u2019s fall from grace in industrialization, while others, like Scott and Zerzan, argue that humanity\u2019s original sin was the development of large-scale agriculture. Graeber and Wengrow make a more sophisticated argument that cultural identity as such, emerging out of political differentiation between competing social groups, generated violent conflict that led to fixed hierarchies, slavery, and the erosion of what they identify as the three \u201cbasic forms of social liberty.\u201d And while not all of these thinkers explicitly make the anarcho-primitivist argument that we should dismantle modern civilization, many of them do, and the ideal is implicit throughout.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe can go back to nature,\u201d Shepard writes in Coming Home to the Pleistocene, \u201cbecause we never left it.\u201d Shepard argues that the hunting and foraging cultures that evolved over many thousands of years in the Pleistocene remain genetically predominant and accessible today. \u201cWhite European\/Americans cannot become Hopis or Kalahari Bushmen or Magdalenian bison hunters,\u201d Shepard grants, \u201cbut elements in those cultures can be recovered or re-created because they fit the heritage and predilection of the human genome everywhere.\u201d In a more Heideggerian register, the anarchist philosopher John Zerzan writes, \u201cWhat we have forgotten may be recovered. Unfolding origin, a journey to origins, is possible. Every authentic choice takes us nearer.\u201d More recently, Graeber and Wengrow argue somewhat paradoxically that increased scientific knowledge about the human past can help us recuperate our primordial \u201cfreedom to create new and different forms of social reality.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Heideggerian anarcho-primitivists, paleo-ecologists, Romantic pessimists, and activist anthropologists may seem like strange allies for critical race theorists, self-appointed caretakers of indigenous knowledge, and advocates of decolonization, but as Robin Wall Kimmerer points out, \u201cTraditional ecological knowledge is not unique to Native American culture but exists all over the world, independent of ethnicity\u201d\u2014even in Europe. Indeed, as numerous scholars have argued, including political scientist Cedric Robinson, the first indigenous people conquered by European colonizers were European peasants, and some of the first Traditional Ecological Knowledges colonized by \u201cWestern epistemologies\u201d were the \u201ccumulative bod[ies] of knowledge, belief, and practice . . . handed down through generations through traditional songs, stories and beliefs\u201d of pagan Britons, Gauls, Teutons, and Slavs. Expropriation of peasant land, enclosure, and colonialism were inextricably bound up together in early capitalism in a reciprocal dynamic Foucault called the \u201cimperial boomerang.\u201d The conception of land as individual property rather than a locus of negotiated privileges and obligations emerged in England only in the sixteenth century, didn\u2019t take firm hold for another hundred and fifty years, and was bound up in contemporaneous phenomena like written recordkeeping, the spread of literacy, colonial surveying, New World land claims, financial risk management, the Protestant Reformation, disputes over ancestral land rights, witch trials, and dispossession. In the words of Belgian medievalist Henri Pirenne, \u201cEurope \u2018colonized\u2019 herself.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAnd this also . . . has been one of the dark places of the earth,\u201d observes Charles Marlow of Victorian London, then capital of the civilized world, in Joseph Conrad\u2019s Heart of Darkness, \u201cthinking of very old times, when the Romans first came here, nineteen hundred years ago\u2014the other day.\u201d Marlow paints a vivid picture of a Roman commander going up the Thames, feeling \u201cthe savagery, the utter savagery\u201d of the ancient Britons closing around him\u2014<\/p>\n<p>all that mysterious life of the wilderness that stirs in the forest, in the jungles, in the hearts of wild men. There\u2019s no initiation either into such mysteries. He has to live in the midst of the incomprehensible, which is also detestable. And it has a fascination, too, that goes to work upon him. The fascination of the abomination\u2014you know, imagine the growing regrets, the longing to escape, the powerless disgust, the surrender, the hate.<\/p>\n<p>These opening lines of The Heart of Darkness\u2014or rather, the beginning of the story within the story\u2014cast an ambivalent but illuminating light on the ideas under discussion, particularly the hope that if we could only escape back to indigenous, pre-modern, pre-agricultural ways of being, we might find redemption. The novel\u2019s central intellectual drama depicts the civilizational double bind thoughtfully explored by Claude L\u00e9vi-Strauss in Tristes Tropiques and astutely diagnosed by Sylvia Wynter and others: the tragic awareness that the recognition of our common humanity cannot bridge the ontological divisions structuring social relations. Just as \u201cWhite European\/Americans cannot become Hopis,\u201d Kurtz cannot become a Congolese, Gilgamesh cannot become Enkidu, Roman cannot become Barbarian, Christian cannot become Pagan, Settler cannot become Savage, White cannot become Black, and Civilized cannot become Indigenous. As Marlow put it, \u201cThere\u2019s no initiation . . . into such mysteries.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Those of us who live in modern, literate, global civilization are incapable of rewilding ourselves, uncivilizing, going native, or decolonizing the Anthropocene. We cannot change at will our \u201cembedded and embodied relations with our other-than-human kin and the land itself,\u201d consciously transform \u201cour understandings of ourselves as human,\u201d or rip up our civilization by the roots and degrowth it into a pastoral Eden. The issue is not whether such a choice is preferable, merely whether it is possible. There can be no doubt that so-called indigenous ways of relating to the land and coexisting with the nonhuman were sustainable, so to speak, for hundreds of thousands of years before the development of large-scale agriculture, empire, literacy, and fossil-fueled industrial capitalism, even if, as archaeologist Steven LeBlanc argues, \u201cthe idea that Native Americans, as well as early humans the world over, lived in ecological harmony is pure fantasy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Modern humans are alienated from nonhuman nature today not by bad ideology or the wrong narratives but by the material structures of industrial life.<\/p>\n<p>Despite the clear limits of the racializing stereotype of the \u201cecological Indian,\u201d animist thought framing human and nonhuman relations through intersubjective kinship indubitably offers a more integrative ecological-cultural matrix than modern extractivism. Further, it may be granted that any imagined alternatives to fossil-fuel capitalism may inspire novel social formations, no matter how impossible they might be in practice. In the final analysis, however, solutions to catastrophic global warming and ecological collapse that depend on Traditional Ecological Knowledges, becoming indigenous, decolonizing the Anthropocene, uncivilization, or anarcho-primitivism\u2014all of which might be seen as versions of an apocalyptic Myth of Renewal\u2014offer no concrete programs or effective tools and face insurmountable conceptual difficulties of which these four are salient: we have never been modern; indigeneity is always local; we cannot become illiterate; and the total violence required for such a vision to be achieved is ethically unsupportable.<\/p>\n<p>The pithily phrased idea that \u201cwe have never been modern\u201d we owe to Bruno Latour, from his book of the same name. His point was that modernity has not made humans \u201crational\u201d but merely shifted the coordinates of our metaphysics. We \u201cmoderns\u201d not only believe in unseen forces that shape our lives but appeal to them through intricate rituals with as much care and passion as any Chacoan sky priest tending his kiva. We are not secular rationalists, that is, but the devout followers of deities like \u201cthe market,\u201d \u201cthe nation,\u201d \u201cdemocracy,\u201d and \u201crace,\u201d committed to the ancestral Myth of Progress, and perennially engaged in the ritualistic performance of complex ceremonies and sacrifices to sustain material relations around wholly metaphysical conceits.<\/p>\n<p>The first problem with the Myth of Renewal is that there is no question of \u201cgoing back\u201d to pre-modern embeddedness in an animate lifeworld, since we are all already embedded in an animate lifeworld today and thus \u201cbecoming indigenous\u201d wouldn\u2019t mean simply returning to the old gods but killing the new ones. Such a spiritual revolt would no doubt find proponents, but it would also spark opposition, and the question of how to deal with any progressivist rump offers no easy solution. Even if you solve that problem, perhaps through conversion by the sword, you still face the question of which gods should rule in the new dispensation: Noqo\u00eclpi the Gambler? C\u014d\u0101tl\u012bcue with her skirt of snakes and necklace of hearts and skulls? One-eyed Odin? There is, after all, no universal indigenous pantheon, nor do indigenous beliefs coexist in some postmodern cosmopolitan multiverse, where Thor and K\u2019uk\u2019ulkan can team up to fight Dr. Doom.<\/p>\n<p>Indigeneity is always local, and not merely local but embedded in specific ecological and geophysical affordances. Potawatomi are not Aztecs, Nambikwara are not Inuit, and Paniya are not Celts. To flip Latour\u2019s famous apothegm: we have never been indigenous. The abstract universality in the idea of indigeneity criticized by Joseph Gone and others not only conflates distinct peoples and times, but flattens and elides the specific ecological relations that make a Shoshone a Shoshone and not a Naskapi Cree, or a neolithic Majiayao farmer who they are and not a Thuringii of the Central European wald. This problem is made even more complex as climate change transforms ecosystems, habitat ranges, and weather patterns, and local ecological knowledge slips out of sync with lived reality. Tragically, the massive ecological perturbations caused by global warming are making indigenous ways of knowing less adaptive and less sustainable, because the lands to which particular ecological knowledges have adapted are changing so rapidly. This phenomenon can be most clearly seen today among Arctic peoples, whose traditional hunting grounds are changing or disappearing and whose traditional ways of living on the land are becoming impracticable.<\/p>\n<p>The various lifeworlds of various indigenous peoples emerged through meaningful relations to specific ecosystem features, particular species of flora and fauna, and reliable regional climatological patterns. All these aspects of reality are now in flux, sometimes catastrophically. We cannot simply return to an animist world rich in meaning when that world has been stripped of the diversity and richness of nonhuman life in relation to which said meaning emerged, while our own daily practices remain embedded in an anthropogenic world of industrial technology, specialized labor, and complex social hierarchy.<\/p>\n<p>Which is to say that modern humans are alienated from nonhuman nature today not by bad ideology or the wrong narratives but by the material structures of industrial life. We don\u2019t hunt our own food. We don\u2019t grow our own corn. We don\u2019t make our own clothing, tools, or homes. We don\u2019t produce our own heat. We are protected from most climatic variation. Our doctors treat illnesses with sophisticated pharmaceuticals and technological apparatuses. Our survival does not depend on close attention to the land, the plants around us, our animal kin, or the weather, but on attention to traffic, the market, and social media. And the meaning of our world is mediated not by the language of animals, plants, earth spirits, and sky gods but by text and images on pages, screens, doors, walls, billboards, and gas pumps.<\/p>\n<p>To evoke Fanon by way of Tuck and Yang, we must recognize that \u201cdecolonization is not a metaphor\u201d and that the scale of disordering violence that genuine \u201cdecolonization\u201d would demand outstrips anything advocates of indigenous epistemologies or uncivilization are likely to accept, since it would be indistinguishable from global genocide. Indigenous ways of knowing and living have never in the history of the planet supported more than fifty million human beings at once; to envision humanity \u201cbecoming indigenous\u201d in any real way would mean returning to primary oral societies with low global population density, lacking complex industrial technology, and relying primarily on human, animal, and plant life for energy. It would mean bringing down the entire system within which we now live\u2014tearing down skyscrapers, blowing up gas stations, burning books, smashing screens, and dismantling complex machines, including harvesters and freezers and centrifuges\u2014and letting more than 99 percent of Earth\u2019s current population die. As Fanon writes, \u201cYou do not disorganize a society . . . with such an agenda if you are not determined from the very start to smash every obstacle encountered.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cEvery obstacle\u201d in the case of \u201cbecoming indigenous\u201d means not only the intractable facts that we have never been modern, that indigeneity is always local, and that we cannot become illiterate. It means not only oil companies and corrupt politicians and the high priests of economics and industrialization. It means \u201cnot just our energy use . . . our modes of governance, ongoing racial injustice, and our understandings of ourselves as human\u201d\u2014not only the roots of plantation logic in forced literacy, centralized agriculture, and private property\u2014not only the possibility that it may be \u201ctoo late for indigenous climate justice,\u201d in the words of Kyle Whyte, because decarbonization and environmental justice are not the same and perhaps even contradictory\u2014but much more. \u201cEvery obstacle\u201d means the material infrastructure of our lives; \u201cevery obstacle\u201d means streets, houses, computers, cars, planes, medicine, cheap energy, cheap food, modern dentistry, refrigeration, central heating, electricity, synthetic-cotton blends, toothpaste, printing presses, PDFs, email, and university indigenous studies programs. Thus while pre-modern indigenous social formations are doubtlessly more ecologically sound than the ones offered by progressivist capitalism, the only path to reach them lies through the end of the world. And as much as we may be obliged to accept and even embrace such an inevitability, committing ourselves to bringing it about is another question entirely.<\/p>\n<p>Excerpted from\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.sup.org\/books\/literary-studies-and-literature\/impasse\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Impasse: Climate Change and the Limits of Progress<\/a> by Roy Scranton, published by Stanford University Press, \u00a92025 by\u00a0Roy Scranton. All rights reserved.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"The peculiar character of our current impasse is that it is at once unprecedented, obscure, and banal as&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":45945,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[30],"tags":[64,63,457,134],"class_list":{"0":"post-45944","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-books","8":"tag-au","9":"tag-australia","10":"tag-books","11":"tag-entertainment"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/45944","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=45944"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/45944\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/45945"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=45944"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=45944"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=45944"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}