Abstract

AbstractThe “Arctic Uchronotopias” special issue of Polar Record is an important contribution to scholarly reflection on resource extraction. The ideas, perspectives, and empirical cases that we encounter have significance for extractivism wherever it takes place, both inside and outside of the Arctic region. To see extractivism through an Arctic lens is particularly useful since it brings up many of the issues that are often at stake in extraction activities, but not always at the same time: geopolitics, transboundary relations, environmental and climate impacts, cultural and natural heritage, indigenous relations, rights issues, local and regional development, and lives and fates of communities. Above all, these papers bring out the full spectrum of issues and tensions related to ongoing major global shifts, such as the Great Acceleration and Overheating, and those transformations of which resource extraction forms a major part. The research presented in Arctic Uchronotopias demonstrates that affect and emotions have explanatory value in the geopolitics of Arctic resource extraction. It also shows that emotional and cognitive experience and wisdom carry values and properties that conventional Environmental Impact Assessments and other technologies of evaluation and decision-making can capture.

Highlights

  • The “Arctic Uchronotopias” special issue of Polar Record is an important contribution to scholarly reflection on resource extraction

  • The Arctic Uchronotopias special collection of Polar Record is among the most important contributions that we have seen in recent years in scholarly reflection on resource extraction

  • The ideas, perspectives, and empirical cases that we encounter in these nine articles have significance for extractivism wherever it takes place, not just in the Arctic

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Summary

Research Article

Cite this article: Sörlin S. Wisdom of affect? Emotion, environment, and the future of resource extraction. Polar Record 57(e27): 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247421000097 Keywords: Extractivism; Natural resources; Arctic humanities; Environmental history; geopolitics Professor of Environmental History, Division of History of Science, Technology and Environment, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SE-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden

The extractivist regime of industrial modernity
Community and the agency of affect
Affect and emerging temporalities
Emotion and environment are connected

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