HomeStore

Cabinet 57: Catastrophe

Product image 1

Cabinet 57: Catastrophe

The theorist Fredric Jameson once wrote that it has become easier for us to imagine the world ending than to imagine a society not built around capitalism. As scenarios forecasting the collapse of social and ecological systems become increasingly credible, our answers seem confined to taking measures within the very logic that is the cause of our predicament. Or we spend our resources preparing for the worst: the Norwegian government builds a global seed vault for a post-apocalyptic future, while individuals stock safe rooms waiting for an end-time. Cabinet 57, with a special section on Catastrophe, includes an interview with Anson Rabinbach on European intellectual responses to the catastrophes of two world wars; Matthew Spellman on St. Anthony the Hermit and the notion of retreating from a world marked by disaster; and Jonathan Hayes on the nineteenth-century roots of the ecological movement. Elsewhere in the issue: Charlie Hale on the decline and (noncomedic) fall of Buster Keaton; Adam Morris on the history of the flume ride and its relationship to logging practices in the US; and more.
$3.60

Original: $12.00

-70%
Cabinet 57: Catastrophe

$12.00

$3.60

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

The theorist Fredric Jameson once wrote that it has become easier for us to imagine the world ending than to imagine a society not built around capitalism. As scenarios forecasting the collapse of social and ecological systems become increasingly credible, our answers seem confined to taking measures within the very logic that is the cause of our predicament. Or we spend our resources preparing for the worst: the Norwegian government builds a global seed vault for a post-apocalyptic future, while individuals stock safe rooms waiting for an end-time. Cabinet 57, with a special section on Catastrophe, includes an interview with Anson Rabinbach on European intellectual responses to the catastrophes of two world wars; Matthew Spellman on St. Anthony the Hermit and the notion of retreating from a world marked by disaster; and Jonathan Hayes on the nineteenth-century roots of the ecological movement. Elsewhere in the issue: Charlie Hale on the decline and (noncomedic) fall of Buster Keaton; Adam Morris on the history of the flume ride and its relationship to logging practices in the US; and more.

You may also like

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Seasons of Glass and Iron

$24.59

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Aunt, I Want to Hear Your Story

$14.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

What Were the Twin Towers?

$22.79

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Riverkeeper

$14.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Historic Tales of the Oregon Coast

$23.39

NEW
Thumbnail 1

London Bridges

$14.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Integrated

$18.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Mother of Rome

$19.00

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Meet Dare: a friends with benefits small town romantic comedy (Winter Falls)

$34.99

$10.50

NEW
Thumbnail 1

How Soccer Explains the World

$18.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Murder at Cinnamon Falls

$18.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Masquerade

$20.00