Political Ecologies of Futurity: Storytelling Plantation Afterlives, Climate Erasures, and Socioecological Justice
By (Author) Alex A. Moulton
Edited by Dylan M. Harris
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
30th October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Political Ecologies of Futurity: Storytelling Plantation Afterlives, Climate Erasures, and Socioecological Justice examines the entanglements of memory, place, and nature in the face of global socioecological transformation. The volume attends to a central question: How does climate related transformation of commemorative landscapes of slavery, settler-colonialism, and racial capitalist extraction affect the prospects of climate change storytelling, and prospects for climate justice by proxy Speaking from a range of disciplinary perspectives and drawing on and combining different epistemological and methodological approaches, the chapters examine the plurality of climate change geographies. As painful as they are, the erasure of landscapes that are artefacts of landscape artefacts of coloniality, racial capitalism, and environmental injustice does not herald placid futures. Erasure can make the present sterile, allowing for apolitical visions of the future to manifest, futures in which marginalized communities are not present. This diminishes prospects for climate justice or any sense of equitable futurity.
With ten chaptersfeaturing case studies from five countries and three distinct regions of the United Statesalong with an Introduction and Conclusion by the editors, 2 original poems, artistic sketch, and an Afterword from Mimi Sheller, this volume creatively demonstrates the potential of storytelling for making sense of climate change and the ecological politics of futures beyond the plantationocene. That is to say, the role storytelling can play in helping us understand the complex temporalities of socioecological transformation.
Alex A. Moulton is an assistant professor of geography and environmental science at Hunter College of the City University of New York (CUNY) and a member of the faculty in the earth and environmental sciences program at The Graduate School and University Center of CUNY.
Dylan M. Harris is an assistant professor of geography and environmental studies at the University of Colorado Colorado Springs (UCCS).