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Geoengineering, Persuasion, and the Climate Crisis

A Geologic Rhetoric

Ehren Helmut Pflugfelder
Barcode 9780817321420
Hardback

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Release Date: 13/12/2022

Genre: Law & Politics
Sub-Genre: Language & Reference
Label: The University of Alabama Press
Series: Rhetoric Culture and Social Critique
Language: English
Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
Pages: 256

A Geologic Rhetoric
Exposes the deeply worrying state of discourse over geoengineering - the intentional manipulation of the earth’s climate as means to halt or reverse global warming. The book investigates how geoengineering proponents marshal geologic actors into their arguments - and how current discourse could lead to greater exploitation of the earth.
A rhetorical exploration of an underexamined side of climate change—the ongoing research into and development of geoengineering strategies

Geoengineering, Persuasion, and the Climate Crisis: A Geologic Rhetoric exposes the deeply worrying state of discourse over geoengineering—the intentional manipulation of the earth’s climate as means to halt or reverse global warming. These climate-altering projects, which range from cloud-whitening to carbon dioxide removal and from stratospheric aerosol injection to enhanced weathering, are all technological solutions to more complex geosocial problems

Geoengineering represents one of the most alarming forms of deliberative discourse in the twenty-first century. Yet geoengineering could easily generate as much harm as the environmental traumas it seeks to cure. Complicating these deliberations is the scarcity of public discussion. Most deliberations transpire within policy groups, behind the closed doors of climate-oriented startups, between subject-matter experts at scientific conferences, or in the disciplinary jargon of research journals. Further, much of this conversation occurs primarily in the West.

Ehren Helmut Pflugfelder makes clear how the deliberative rhetorical strategies coming from geoengineering advocates have been largely deceptive, hegemonic, deterministic, and exploitative. In this volume, he investigates how geoengineering proponents marshal geologic actors into their arguments—and how current discourse could lead to a greater exploitation of the earth in the future.

Pflugfelder’s goal is to understand the structure, content, purpose, and effect of these discourses, raise the alarm about their deliberative directions, and help us rethink our approach to the climate. In highlighting both the inherent problems of the discourses and the ways geologic rhetoric can be made productive, he attempts to give “the geologic” a place at the table to better understand the roles that all earth systems continue to play in our lives, now and for years to come.