Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1 Connecting Modernities: A Global Update
- Part I Modernity as We Know It: Narratives of Modernity across the Disciplines
- Part II Modernity under Fire: Critiques, Challenges, and Revisions
- Part III In the Shadow of the Pandemic
- Part IV Imagining New Global Frameworks: Democracy and Modernity-to-Come
- Index
13 - Environmentalism: A Challenge to Modernity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 April 2022
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1 Connecting Modernities: A Global Update
- Part I Modernity as We Know It: Narratives of Modernity across the Disciplines
- Part II Modernity under Fire: Critiques, Challenges, and Revisions
- Part III In the Shadow of the Pandemic
- Part IV Imagining New Global Frameworks: Democracy and Modernity-to-Come
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter discusses the environmental movement vis-à-vis modernity in the last century. Starting in the early 70s, the contemporary environmental movement consists of articulated collective action opposing polluting agents in different areas of the world, and pursuing a new planetary natural equilibrium. This movement aims to construct a new more balanced model for natural development by scientific and technical means. This movement doesn't pursue a romantic project to protect nature against modernity and modernization, nor a denial of modernity, nor modernity as a crisis, but a new way to understand and change the world. The environmental movement produces a critical consciousness of both itself and modernity.
Keywords: modernity; social movements; environment; Greta Thunberg; Covid-19 pandemic
Environmentalism concerns how the various elements of nature – human beings and their societies, other living animals and plants, and minerals – relate to one another. How the environment is viewed is intrinsically linked to modernity, a process whereby not only the known world is organized in a rational way through science and technology, but where human beings, as uniquely sexualized subjects endeavoring to control the development of their very existence, require their rights to be understood and recognized.
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, in the West, the protection of nature was an objective mainly set by social actors using scientific and technical knowledge to persuade political institutions to promote the protection of living beings and minerals from industrial and urban expansion. A more rational approach to the protection of the environment began on a political level with a gradual allocation of even large areas of territory as natural parks in America, in Europe and in areas of other continents colonized by Western powers.
On the other hand, practices making reference to nature, but using science and technology to conduct studies on human beings, denying their basic rights, are to be considered anti-modernist. In the first half of the twentieth century, European and American research centers produced essays and set up research projects with the aim of establishing different genetic heritages of human beings, if not the existence of different human races, with the pre-eminence of one – the Nordic race.
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- Information
- Global Modernity from Coloniality to PandemicA Cross-Disciplinary Perspective, pp. 297 - 320Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022