Abstract

AbstractEnvironmental uncertainty, climate change, and ecological crisis loom large in the present and permeate scenarios of potential futures. To understand these predicaments and prepare for potentially catastrophic scenarios, there have been repeated calls to explore the diverse human–climate relations of human societies in the past. The archeological record offers rich datasets on human–environment articulations reflected in artifacts, ecofacts, and their relational entanglements. Much of these human–environment conjugations are, in the absence of written records, only accessible archeologically, yet that discipline has played little role in the “environmental turn” of the humanities or the climate change debate. In an effort to articulate archeological research traditions with these concerns, we frame the notion of the paleoenvironmental humanities (pEH): a deep‐time training ground for current ideas and theories on the interrelationship of human behavior, climate, and environmental change. The key objective of the pEH is to offer a rejoinder between ecological reductionism and the adoption of full‐scale environmental relativism, opening up new interpretive and comparative terrain for the examination of human–climate relations. We probe the potential of this perspective by drawing on insights from Pleistocene archeology. The long‐term temporalities of the Pleistocene, we argue, promote alternative imaginaries of the human–climate nexus and draw attention to similarly long‐term futures. We end our proposal with a reflection on the responsibility of archeological practitioners to balance hopeful narratives of human adaptability with those of societal collapse, countering the emergent linkage between climate skepticism and right‐wing nationalism, and to bring such issues to public attention.This article is categorized under: Climate, History, Society, Culture > Disciplinary Perspectives

Highlights

  • Increasing environmental uncertainty, rapid climate change, and widening ecological crisis loom large in the present, and they permeate scenarios of potential futures (Field et al, 2012)

  • While archeology can at times lay claim to specific sustainability solutions (Guttmann-Bond, 2019; but see Lane, 2015), the objective of the paleoenvironmental humanities (pEH) is not so much to find a single answer to any given contemporary climate problem or to promote a unified pool of knowledge but rather to profit from the naturally heterogeneous and diverse set of ecological experiences associated with the human deep past, and to raise awareness of the power of archeological narratives in forming intergenerational futures

  • We propose the pEH to align the rich, long-term archeological datasets on human–environment interactions with issues, concepts, and concerns of the emerging environmental humanities and the climate change debate at large

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Increasing environmental uncertainty, rapid climate change, and widening ecological crisis loom large in the present, and they permeate scenarios of potential futures (Field et al, 2012). While archeology can at times lay claim to specific sustainability solutions (Guttmann-Bond, 2019; but see Lane, 2015), the objective of the pEH is not so much to find a single answer to any given contemporary climate problem or to promote a unified pool of knowledge but rather to profit from the naturally heterogeneous and diverse set of ecological experiences associated with the human deep past, and to raise awareness of the power of archeological narratives in forming intergenerational futures.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.