cover image Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence

Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence

Timothy Morton. Columbia Univ., $30 (208p) ISBN 978-0-231-17752-8

Morton (Hyperobjects), a philosopher and professor of English at Rice University, attempts%E2%80%94with mixed results%E2%80%94to poetically jump-start a searching reevaluation of philosophy, politics, and art in light of the current ecological crisis. The book is strange, and some may find it decidedly uncanny. In and through its looping prose, he argues that there are strata of acclimatizations that must be made in mind, body, and soul for humans to come to "ecognosis": the knowledge that our very conception of nature might be what is destroying it. In a stream-of-consciousness style, Morton weaves together scientific and humanistic perspectives to craft a text that argues that the current ecological crisis is linked to a "logistical %E2%80%98program'%E2%80%89" that has been present in human systems since the Stone Age. "Dark ecology" is the recognition that the changes that must be made involve melancholy, irony, unsettling joy, and ultimately radical transformations in the ways humans conceive of, and live in, the universe. Morton commands readers' attention with his free-form style, but some may find it as repellent as it is compelling. Morton extends his previous work to offer a seismically different vision of the future of ecology and humankind. (Apr.)