Acknowledgements.
This Book and How to Use It.
Introduction. Society, Nature and Enlightenment.
Changing Nature, Changing Ourselves.
The Age of Enlightenment.
Enlightenment’s Shadow.
The Age of Enlightenment and This Book.
References and Further Reading.
1. Introducing Key Themes:.
Overview.
Contributions from Evolutionary Thought.
The Decline of Community?.
Industry and Production.
A Risk Society?.
Summary.
References and Further Reading.
2. Industry and Environmental Transformation:.
Overview.
Industry and Humanity’s Metabolism with Nature.
Social Evolution, Biological Evolution and Marx.
Risk and the Metabolic Rift.
Community: a New Basis for Industrial Production.
Summary.
References and Further Reading.
3. Commodifying the Environment:.
Overview.
Commodification and Industry.
Commodification and Community.
Commodifying Evolution?.
Commodification and ‘Manufactured Risk’.
Summary.
4. Consumption, The Environment and Human Identity:.
Overview.
Society and Nature: Over-Consumption as the Problem?.
Consumption and the Making of Community.
‘The Consumer Society’: the Final Stage of Social Evolution?.
Industry and Consumption.
The Risk Society: Poverty and Industry as the Issue.
Summary.
References and Further Reading.
5. Industrial Change, the Network Society and Human Identity:.
Overview.
An Evolved Human Nature?.
Industrial Development, the Network Society and Changes to Human Nature.
The Network Society and Virtual Community.
Psychic Structure, Network Society and Evolution.
Postfordism, the Network Society and Risk.
Summary.
References and Further Reading.
6. Modifying Human Biology:.
Overview.
Industrialising Birth, Improving Humans?.
Improving on Evolution: Genes and the Good Life.
Community and Human Development.
Human Transformation and The Risk Society.
Summary.
References and Further Reading.
7. Society, Nature and Citizenship:.
Overview.
Society, Politics and Rights.
The Evolution of Rights?.
Industry and Citizenship.
Citizenship as Community.
Citizenship as Risk.
Summary.
References and Further Reading.
8. Society, Nature and the New Social Movements:.
Overview.
The New Social Movements.
Social Evolution and Risk.
New Social Movements: Revealing and Making Community.
Human Evolution and the Recovery of Human Nature.
Summary.
References and Further Reading.
Glossary of Terms.
Index
Peter Dickens is Senior Research Fellow, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, University of Cambridge and Fellow and Director of Studies in Social and Political Sciences, Fitzwilliam College. He is also visiting Professor of Sociology, University of Essex.
“Offers a multi-disciplinary, well-rounded theoretical discussion
of the interdependent relationship between humans and the natural
world.”
Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology
“Dickens presents his own original and significant analysis of
relationships between social and biological dynamics and
identities. I recommend enthusiastically that this book be
read.”
Raymond Murphy, Canadian Journal of Sociology “Presents the
author's own highly original analysis of relations between society
and nature based on a Maxist and critical realist perspective. The
book also provides a valuable overview and critique of much
classical and contemporary sociology.”
Environment and Society “Society and Nature, by British sociologist
Peter Dickens, offers a rare blend of scholarship. Its narrative is
both authoritative, yet accessible. Its content is broad and
comprehensive in scope, while managing to still provide an
important contribution to the field of enviromental sociology
(among others). It is both a textbook, for undergraduates and
individuals new to the field, and a rigorous work of scholarship in
its own right. In bringing this together, Dickens is to be
commended for his ability to weave in and out of a diverse array of
literatures - from enviromental sociology, to the sociology of
technology, social theory, evolutionary sociology, molecular and
developmental biology and cognitive psychology. In all, Society and
Nature is an important contribution to the field of enviromental
sociology. Dickens' shows us, in rather dramatic fashion, just how
intertwined the social and natural realms are.”
Organisation and Enviroment “This is a valuable and scholarly book,
packed with ideas for further reading. It contains a great deal of
knowledge and scholarly understanding, rendered down into
bite-sized chunks. It would make an excellent student text ... yet
will inform many research level debates.”
Bill Adams, Area
“A useful addition to the bookshelves of anyone who has even a
passing interest in the new governance of the environment, not just
students.”
British Journal of Sociology
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