A historian offers a unique look at the pandemic, climate change, and
the human versus nonhuman.
Climate change represents a deep conundrum for humans. It is difficult
for humans to give up the unequal and yet accelerating pursuit of a good
life based on an insatiable appetite for energy sourced mainly from
fossil fuel. But the same pursuit, scientists insist, damages the
geobiological system that supports the existence of interrelated forms
of life, including ours, on this planet. The planet, seen thus, is one.
The global sway of financial and extractive capital connects humans
technologically, but they remain divided along multiple axes of
inequality. Their worlds are many and their politics still global rather
than planetary. In the narrative presented here, Chakrabarty continues
to explore the temporal and intellectual fault lines that mark the
collapse of the global and the planetary in human history.