Moving Nature: Towards a Scandinavian Anthropocene

£104.00

Available for Pre-order. Due January 2027.

Moving Nature: Towards a Scandinavian Anthropocene Editors: Marit Ruge Bjærke, Frida Hastrup, Kyrre Kverndokk Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Berghahn Books
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Pages: 234 Illustrations and other contents: Bibliography; Index Language: English ISBN: 9781807680480 Categories: ,

Moving Nature explores the Anthropocene in Scandinavia through the movement of organisms, substances and ideologies, from the mid-eighteenth century to the present. Case studies explore the Pacific oyster and wild boar as alien species, the production of Arctic animal museum specimens, changing Nordic livestock regimes, the afterlives of Swedish copper production, eighteenth century attempts to combat ‘evil herbs’, and clearing of Argentinian rainforest by Swedish migrants. Collectively, they show how the Anthropocene in Scandinavia can be characterised by such movements, and how they promoted progress and related to the welfare state, whilst remaining entangled with transgressive and colonial forms of intervention.

Weight0.4281384 kg
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‘[This book] provides valuable examples on how to approach the Anthropocene as a humanities scholar, and it takes an approach to the Anthropocene as a productive concept that itself moves and mobilizes humanities questions, study cases, ways of research and disciplinary collaborations.’ — Sabine Höhler, KTH Royal Institute of Technology

Author Biography

Marit Ruge Bjærke is a Researcher in Cultural Studies at the Department of Archaeology, History, Cultural Studies and Religion, University of Bergen, Norway. Her research focuses on how environmental issues are understood and acted upon. She recently published Nature Gone Wild? Alien Species and We who Move Them (2025, in Norwegian).