Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

IPPR Progressive Review 25(2)
by multiple authors (editors)

IPPR Progressive Review 25(2)
by multiple authors (editors)

IPPR Progressive Review 25(2)
by multiple authors (editors)

214

Welcome to the Anthropocene

0
terms
1
notes

A. Maslin, M. and L. Lewis, S. (2018). Welcome to the Anthropocene. In Roberts, C. and Lawrence, M. (eds) IPPR Progressive Review 25(2). IPPR, pp. 214-219

217

The requirement for most of us to sell our labour and be ever more productive is compensated for by enabling us to increase our consumption. Given this dynamic, it makes little sense to forgo environmentally damaging behaviour when we know we have to work harder in the future regardless of our choices. Consumption is the payback for being ever-more productive at work. We often tell ourselves that we deserve the that lunch of foodstuffs sourced from hundreds of miles away, the highest high-tech gizmo, or long-haul holiday. We say: I'm working hard, I've earned it.

unbidden, that one Zizek quote springs to mind - about how you can recognise ideology but still not be impervious to its effects

—p.217 by Mark A. Maslin, Simon L. Lewis 5 years, 11 months ago

The requirement for most of us to sell our labour and be ever more productive is compensated for by enabling us to increase our consumption. Given this dynamic, it makes little sense to forgo environmentally damaging behaviour when we know we have to work harder in the future regardless of our choices. Consumption is the payback for being ever-more productive at work. We often tell ourselves that we deserve the that lunch of foodstuffs sourced from hundreds of miles away, the highest high-tech gizmo, or long-haul holiday. We say: I'm working hard, I've earned it.

unbidden, that one Zizek quote springs to mind - about how you can recognise ideology but still not be impervious to its effects

—p.217 by Mark A. Maslin, Simon L. Lewis 5 years, 11 months ago