Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene

Research output: Book/ReportPh.D. thesisResearch

Standard

Approaching the Edge : Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene. / Ejsing, Mads.

Copenhagen : Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Copenhagen, 2021. 241 p.

Research output: Book/ReportPh.D. thesisResearch

Harvard

Ejsing, M 2021, Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene. Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen.

APA

Ejsing, M. (2021). Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene. Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Ejsing M. Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene. Copenhagen: Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Copenhagen, 2021. 241 p.

Author

Ejsing, Mads. / Approaching the Edge : Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene. Copenhagen : Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Copenhagen, 2021. 241 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{d60c4f88bc6247239378754c96c438b4,
title = "Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene",
abstract = "Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene is an attempt to rethink what democracy might mean in a time of widespread ecological and climatic crises. Drawing on recent theoretical innovations by thinkers like Jane Bennett, Bruno Latour, Anna Tsing, and Donna Haraway, the dissertation argues in favor of a new materialist theory of democracy that envisions politics as a multi-sited, multispecies affair involving complex assemblages of both human and nonhuman forces and beings. More specifically, the dissertation offers a new materialist reconceptualization of three central concepts in contemporary democratic theory: political participation, political representation, and political leadership. Throughout the dissertation, the theoretical insights are developed in close conversation with an ongoing ethnographic engagement with a small rural community on the west coast of Denmark called Lemvig, where many of the challenges associated with democratic politics in the Anthropocene are acutely felt. By investigating the abstract theoretical matters through the lens of this particular place, the dissertation aims to offer a different kind of situated knowledge about the state of democracy today, which takes seriously the multiple and complex character of the Anthropocene condition.",
author = "Mads Ejsing",
year = "2021",
language = "English",
isbn = " 9788772094281",
publisher = "Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Approaching the Edge

T2 - Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene

AU - Ejsing, Mads

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene is an attempt to rethink what democracy might mean in a time of widespread ecological and climatic crises. Drawing on recent theoretical innovations by thinkers like Jane Bennett, Bruno Latour, Anna Tsing, and Donna Haraway, the dissertation argues in favor of a new materialist theory of democracy that envisions politics as a multi-sited, multispecies affair involving complex assemblages of both human and nonhuman forces and beings. More specifically, the dissertation offers a new materialist reconceptualization of three central concepts in contemporary democratic theory: political participation, political representation, and political leadership. Throughout the dissertation, the theoretical insights are developed in close conversation with an ongoing ethnographic engagement with a small rural community on the west coast of Denmark called Lemvig, where many of the challenges associated with democratic politics in the Anthropocene are acutely felt. By investigating the abstract theoretical matters through the lens of this particular place, the dissertation aims to offer a different kind of situated knowledge about the state of democracy today, which takes seriously the multiple and complex character of the Anthropocene condition.

AB - Approaching the Edge: Towards a New Materialist Theory of Democracy for the Anthropocene is an attempt to rethink what democracy might mean in a time of widespread ecological and climatic crises. Drawing on recent theoretical innovations by thinkers like Jane Bennett, Bruno Latour, Anna Tsing, and Donna Haraway, the dissertation argues in favor of a new materialist theory of democracy that envisions politics as a multi-sited, multispecies affair involving complex assemblages of both human and nonhuman forces and beings. More specifically, the dissertation offers a new materialist reconceptualization of three central concepts in contemporary democratic theory: political participation, political representation, and political leadership. Throughout the dissertation, the theoretical insights are developed in close conversation with an ongoing ethnographic engagement with a small rural community on the west coast of Denmark called Lemvig, where many of the challenges associated with democratic politics in the Anthropocene are acutely felt. By investigating the abstract theoretical matters through the lens of this particular place, the dissertation aims to offer a different kind of situated knowledge about the state of democracy today, which takes seriously the multiple and complex character of the Anthropocene condition.

M3 - Ph.D. thesis

SN - 9788772094281

BT - Approaching the Edge

PB - Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Copenhagen

CY - Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 285242913