• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Co‐Producing (a Fearful) Anthropocene
  • Contributor: COOK, BRIAN R.; BALAYANNIS, ANGELIKI
  • imprint: Wiley, 2015
  • Published in: Geographical Research
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/1745-5871.12126
  • ISSN: 1745-5863; 1745-5871
  • Keywords: Earth-Surface Processes ; Geography, Planning and Development
  • Origination:
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  • Description: <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>The Anthropocene is not amenable to the senses but, like many modern concepts, must be made visible. We explore the ‘Great Acceleration’ imagery as an immutable mobile to explore how this human‐made geological epoch is constituted through the aggregation of disparate elements of extreme complexity. Our analysis explores how disparate issues such as ‘telephone use’ and ‘coastal zone biogeochemistry’ can be associated and enrolled into the same argument. We write as concerned observers, who are concerned with the way that recognition for phenomena is enrolled into a fear‐based narrative. This risks reproducing the governance structures at the heart of the Great Acceleration and, if so, we ask what this might mean. Using fear is a risky strategy that is as likely to lead to relatively poor behaviours as it is to some ‘awakening’. We make this case as a way of contributing to the Anthropocene debate, challenging those promoting the idea to consider the co‐productive relationship between the knowledge they are proposing and the governance that knowledge entails.</jats:p>