Cities and the Anthropocene
Can global urban historians engage the concept of the Anthropocene? To write urban history from the Anthropocene may involve reimagining our discipline. Temporal, spatial, theoretical, disciplinary, and political challenges are at stake.
Temporally, we need to operate at once on deep geological time, on the multi-cyclical time of the Sun’s relationship to Earth, on the patient time of the biosphere's ebb and flow, on the "deep" time of humans' relationship to other lifeforms, on the contingent time of tectonic shift and volcanism, on the accelerating time of anthropogenic transformation, and on the choppier, far less predictable time of human politics. Spatially, thinking about cities as creations and creators of the Anthropocene allows us to think of the built environment and its socio-cultural histories through materials like dust, sand, cement, and hydrocarbons and through connections to Earthly spaces like fields, forests, grasslands, mountains, marshes, rivers, estuaries, oceans, and the atmosphere. Theoretically, cities of the Anthropocene are by definition global and planetary. What, therefore, should urban historians do with concepts like “the global city” and “planetary urbanization” that come from the social sciences and that typically do not address longer temporalities nor engage the complexities historians bring to the study of change? If cross-disciplinary questions within the social sciences and humanities are vexed enough, what of those between urban history, climate science, and geology?
Finally, we must keep our eye squarely focused on cities’ role in human and environmental justice. As we build a global history informed by the Anthropocene and climate change, we must retain our focus on realities of resource scarcity, displacement, land submergence, migration, the transnational movement of minerals, materials, goods, ideas, people, and capital, and extensions of imperial state power.
Co-Coordinators: Carl Nightingale, Toby Lincoln, Mark Williams, and Sam Grinsell