This is much more than a reworking of politics. It is a sketch of a resolution of the perennial questions of what we know and what exists⌠LatourâŚcan be infuriating. But he is never boring. <i>Politics of Nature</i> must be difficult because it challenges assumptions that are built into our languages, such as the hallowed distinction between âfactsâ and âvaluesâ⌠It is worth readingâtwice.
- Mike Holderness, New Scientist
<i>Politics of Nature</i> constitutes a major contribution to contemporary thought and discourse⌠I anticipate that it will increase recognition that we can make our institutions and policies more responsive to our concerns by taking a deliberative, critical approach to the metaphysical foundations of our attitudes toward nature, science and politics.
- Yaron Ezrahi, American Scientist
Despite all our concern, our pressure groups, non-governmental organisations and ministers for the environment, [Latour] maintains that political ecology is paralysed by established categories of thought. Only a radical rethink will enable us to grasp the import of ecology and launch a new approach to the maintenance of a tolerable life⌠Through all his work on science, technology and society, Latour has developed a style of writing that is an unusual and often startling combination of remarkably acute observation and analysis of science in action (to quote an earlier title), of metaphorical flights and rhetorical flourishes, of <i>aperçus</i>, of exhortations to relinquish familiar concepts, categories and meanings and of what, as a non-philosopher, I take to be breathtaking philosophical presumption⌠[An] often intriguing and occasionally infuriating book.
- Jon Turney, Times Higher Education Supplement
<i>Politics of Nature: How to Bring the Sciences into Democracy</i> by French author Bruno Latour, brings a fascinating and bold new twist to contemporary discussions about the nature of ânature.â Latour proposes a radical shift in current conceptions of âpolitical ecology,â arguing that mainstream environmental movements are doomed to fail so long as they envision political ecology as inextricably tied to the protection and management of nature through political methodologies and policies⌠Latour does not reject the sciences, only hegemonic science. His book is a warning of sorts, that in our rush to separate human from nonhuman, interests from nature, and politics from ecology, we have jeopardized the foundation of democracy: informed public deliberation about the common good. Nature is not to be conquered, controlled, or even protected. Rather, our conceptions of natural fact and reality must be re-examined in order or make room for other members of the political-ecological collective. Scholars in environmental studies will find this book useful⌠While Latourâs project is far-reaching and admittedly idealistic, it raises interesting questions and seeks to engender public deliberation about ecological issues, including how the environmental movement should proceed in the coming critical decades. Rhetorical scholars interested in linguistic representations of nature, the discursive construction of reality and culture, and the interplay of the technical and public spheres also will find this book useful. It is well-written, extensively researched, positive in tone, and enjoyable to read.
- Matthew G. Gerber, Argumentation and Advocacy
Latourâs politics is procedural and fluid, not driven by a desire to establish domains. If for no other reason than this, <i>Politics of Nature</i> is important for environmental philosophy. Environmentalism is in crisis partly because of its unexamined attachment to a declensionist narrative about humans and nonhumans. Philosophers too often fall into this trap as well. As we struggle with the question, âWhat is to be doneâŚ,â many of us expand this question to include the phrase ââŚin a world at the tipping point of environmental disaster?â We could do worse than allow Latour to remind us that we need to try to not start with what has been lost, but what can be gained. He urges us to make associations, work toward a more universal collective, create a genuinely progressive future, and build the attendant skills to assemble our demos into something better and more interesting than it is now. Isnât this what always must be done?
- Randall Honold, Environmental Philosophy
Since political ecology does not yet exist conceptually, Latourâs project is best understood as the act of its production⌠Multiculturalism and, more recently, multinaturalism make it possible for politics and the sciences to work together today to articulate the common world in radically new ways. His argument is motivated by a concern that humanity might miss the current moment, might refuse to slow down enough to reflect on its possible futures, and might instead rush from twentieth-century totalitarianism to twenty-first-century globalization. According to Latour, both phenomena involve similar processes of exclusion; they create collectives that prematurely juxtapose a universal humanity to an external nature⌠Latourâs argument is as complex as it is creative. In addition to Plato and Aristotle, he alludes to Hobbes, Rousseau, Kant, Lenin, Jurgen Habermas, and, among the most intriguing, Charles Fourier.
- Nancy S. Love, Perspectives on Politics