ABSTRACT

What does it mean to live a good life in a time when the planet is overheating, the human population continues to steadily reach new peaks, oceans are turning more acidic, and fertile soils the world over are eroding at unprecedented rates? These and other simultaneous harms and threats demand creative responses at several levels of consideration and action.

Written by an international team of contributors, this book examines in-depth the relationship between sustainability and the good life. Drawing on wealth of theories, from social practice theory to architecture and design theory, and disciplines, such as anthropology and environmental philosophy, this volume promotes participatory action-research based approaches to encourage sustainability and wellbeing at local levels. It covers topical issues such the politics of prosperity, globalization, and indigenous notions of "the good life" and happiness". Finally it places a strong emphasis on food at the heart of the sustainability and good life debate, for instance binding the global south to the north through import and exports, or linking everyday lives to ideals within the dream of the good life, with cookbooks and shows.

This interdisciplinary book provides invaluable insights for researchers and postgraduate students interested in the contribution of the environmental humanities to the sustainability debate.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

Enough is enough?

Re-imagining an ethics and aesthetics of sustainability for the twenty-first century

chapter 3|12 pages

Towards a sustainable flourishing

Democracy, hedonism and the politics of prosperity

chapter 4|25 pages

Is the good life sustainable?

A three-decade study of values, happiness and sustainability in Norway

chapter 7|15 pages

Well-being in sustainability transitions

Making use of needs

chapter 8|20 pages

Human needs and the environment reconciled

Participatory action-research for sustainable development in Peru

chapter 11|21 pages

Follow the food

How eating and drinking shape our cities

chapter 12|20 pages

Caged welfare

Evading the good life for egg-laying hens

chapter 13|20 pages

Being salmon, being human

Notes on an ecological turn in the modern narrative tradition

chapter 14|13 pages

Afterword

Beyond the paradox of the big, bad wolf