Stratigraphy for the Renaissance: Questions of expertise for 'the environment' and 'the Anthropocene'

Date

2017

Authors

Warde, Paul
Robin, Libby
Sorlin, Sverker

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Journals

Abstract

This article examines the short history of scientific decision-making and expertise in deliberations about the validity of the term ‘Anthropocene’ by the International Commission on Stratigraphy. Contrary to fears that the Anthropocene debates constitute a politicisation of proper scientific practice, it argues that periodisation and categorisation in science (in stratigraphy, in this case) typically draws on expertise and information outside core disciplinary practice. When broad integrative concepts come into play, knowledge itself is reshaped. Disciplines and ‘non-scientific’ concerns develop new relations with each other. This is what happened in the Renaissance, when science itself emerged in its modern form. Here parallels are drawn between the emergence of the concept ‘the environment’ in the post-war era and the 21st-century struggles over the idea of ‘the Anthropocene’. The politics of science create uncertainties but equally nurture emergent possibilities for analysis that are not unlike the broad categories and periodisations – such as the Renaissance – in the humanities.

Description

Keywords

Anthropocene, boundaries, environment, environmental sciences, expertise, history, humanities, interdisciplinary knowledge, politics, stratigraphy

Citation

Source

The Anthropocene Review

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31