The book provides ecocultural perspectives on ethics from a variety of cultural contexts. It argues that any ecological perspectives/issues/conditions cannot be separated from their cultural contexts and thus, we need to employ a culture-specific scrutiny to understand the ethics of ecoculture.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword
Mark C. Long
Part I: Ecoethics of Research and Quotidian Philosophy
One - Systems and Frameworks for Comparative Cross-Cultural Research
Alan Drengson
Two - Philosophy from the Field: Hermeneutic of the Sundarbans Islanders Phenomenological Experience of Environmental Change
Kalpita Bhar Paul and Meera Baindur
Three - Devtha-s, dharti, and the devbh mi: Practices of ecological selves in the HimalayasMeera Baindur
Four - Relativism, Realism, and the Roots of the Ecological Crisis
Alyssa Luboff
Part II: Ecoethics of Forest and Development
Five - Encountering the City and the Forest in C. N Sreekantan Nair's Kanchana Sita
Anchitha Krishna and Swarnalatha Rangarajan
Six - Ecoethics of the Desert: The Bedouins' Dwelling in the Eastern Desert of Egypt in Sabri Moussa's Seeds of Corruption
Mariam Taha (Al-Naqr)
Seven - The Ground of Our Being: Dear Governor Cuomo as a Planetary Narrative
Vidya Sarveswaran
Eight - The Hazards of Anthropocentrism: Rereading Kamala Markandeya's The Coffer Dams
Anita Balakrishnan
Part III: Ecoethics of Domestication, Conservation and Religion
Nine - "Such Unforced Love": Mary Oliver Re-thinks Domestication
Dee Horne
Ten - Culture and Conservation: A study of Kadar Tribe in Kerala
Divya Kalathingal
Eleven - Buddhist Environmental Ethics: A Strategy for Survival
Jaharlal Debbarma and K. Y. Ratnam
Twelve - Jainism, Ecology and Ethics
Venu Mehta