How can we help and support people to face climate change?
Engaging with Climate Change is one of the first books to explore in depth what climate change actually means to people. It brings members of a wide range of different disciplines in the social sciences together in discussion and to introduce a psychoanalytic perspective. The important insights that result have real implications for policy, particularly with regard to how to relate to people when discussing the issue. Topics covered include:
what lies beneath the current widespread denial of climate change
how do we manage our feelings about climate change
our great difficulty in acknowledging our true dependence on nature
our conflicting identifications
the effects of living within cultures that have perverse aspects
the need to mourn before we can engage in a positive way with the new conditions we find ourselves in.
Through understanding these issues and adopting policies that recognise their implications humanity can hope to develop a response to climate change of the nature and scale necessary. Aimed at the general reader as well as psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and climate scientists, this book will deepen our understanding of the human response to climate change.
Reviews
I read this book straight through in two days. More shocking than a fantasy novel, more touching than an individual intimate story, it is an interdisciplinary book of high quality that shows how people hardly dare to face the truth about climate change and how psychoanalysis helps us explore the reality, inside and outside our minds, beyond defensive illusions and tragic disavowal - Stefano Bolognini, MD, President of the Italian Psychoanalytic Society and President Elect of the International Psychoanalytic Association
By bringing together some of the most cutting-edge and creative thinkers on the ecological crisis, this anthology builds a persuasive case for how a greater understanding of human psychology -- including the ps of denial, compassion and cruelty -- can help break the climate deadlock. A powerful riposte to the notion that climate communicators have only two options: relentlessly terrify the public, or try to fool them into action without mentioning the word "climate." – Naomi Klein, author of "The Shock Doctrine"
Throughout the book, we are repeatedly reminded of two most basic facts; that we are all much less rational than we care to think, and that we are of, not above, the natural world. - Chris Rapley, CBE, Professor of Climate Science at University College London
Contents
Rapley. Foreword. Weintrobe, Preface. Weintrobe, Introduction. Hamilton, What History Can Teach Us About Climate Change Denial. Weintrobe, The Difficult Problem Of Anxiety In Thinking About Climate Change. Lehtonen, Välimäki, Discussion The Environmental Neurosis Of Modern Man: The Illusion Of Autonomy And The Real Dependence Denied. Mause-Hanke, Discussion. Hoggett, Climate Change Denial In A Perver...