We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Land of Extraction
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
12 March 2024

2024 Outstanding Academic Title, given by Choice Reviews
Explores fracking’s dual impact on settler colonial culture and sustainability
Through meticulous research and poignant storytelling, Land of Extraction unravels the complex web of relationships between humans, places, and the environment, all bound by the concept of private property. It presents a thought-provoking analysis of how settler colonial culture imposes limits on environmental politics.
Drawing on real-life events, fictional portrayals of fossil-fuel driven apocalypses, and firsthand ethnographic accounts of the fracking and pipeline boom in West Virginia, Rebecca R. Scott argues that the American dream’s promise of empowerment through property ownership actually restricts action against extractive industries and hampers the progress of environmental justice coalitions.
As the ever-expanding reach of natural gas and pipeline industries takes its toll on communities, the book reveals the fractures in landowners’ reliance on private property, opening the door to more sustainable futures. A powerful call to reevaluate our perspectives and challenge the status quo, this book will leave readers questioning the foundations of our society and the possibilities that lie ahead.
Poignant, poetic, urgent, profound: the adjectives multiply in attempting to describe this masterful work of scholarship. Rebecca R. Scott is one of our foremost environmental humanists, and Land of Extraction is a superlative work. With sensitivity and nuance she examines the complicated entanglement of fracking, settler colonialism, indigeneity, historical trauma, memory, waste, sacrifice, and ownership of the land in West Virginia. The lessons about property and its limiting force revealed here will be of interest to anyone wishing for more just ways to to imagine environmental futures in a time of unending and self-inflicted crises.
Scott explores fracking’s dual impact on settler colonial culture and sustainability...a thought-provoking analysis of how settler colonial culture imposes limits on environmental politics.
Scott has established herself as one of the most potent commentators on Appalachia and its ecological devastation in pursuit of developmentalism. Land of Extraction, her monumental work of theory building and methodological innovation, further attests to it ... Scott draws on eclectic research approaches that range from ecocriticism, ethnography, and autoethnography to open-ended interviews